<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<eml:eml xmlns:eml="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1 http://rs.gbif.org/schema/eml-gbif-profile/1.0.1/eml.xsd" packageId="034e94ed-2f8c-4fc2-bcd8-13517293df1b" system="https://symbiota.org" scope="system" xml:lang="eng"><dataset><alternateIdentifier>https://eastafricaherbaria.net/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=8</alternateIdentifier><title xml:lang="eng">Tanzania Forestry Research Institute Herbarium</title><creator id="bb3954fe-3fde-4e0d-b6bc-6566aa214e7f"><organizationName>East Africa Herbaria Portal</organizationName><electronicMailAddress>michaelthomas.bdi@gmail.com</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>https://eastafricaherbaria.net/index.php</onlineUrl></creator><metadataProvider><organizationName>East Africa Herbaria Portal</organizationName><electronicMailAddress>michaelthomas.bdi@gmail.com</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>https://eastafricaherbaria.net/index.php</onlineUrl></metadataProvider><pubDate>2026-06-01</pubDate><language>eng</language><abstract><para>The Tanzania Forestry Research Institute Herbarium (TFRI) is a specialized national research collection dedicated to documenting Tanzania&amp;rsquo;s forest and woodland flora. Based at TAFORI headquarters in Morogoro, the herbarium underpins applied and scientific research focused on sustainable forest management, biodiversity conservation, restoration, and climate resilience.&#13;
The collection emphasizes forest trees, shrubs, lianas, and associated understorey species from Tanzania&amp;rsquo;s major vegetation types, including miombo woodlands, coastal forests, montane and sub-montane forests, riverine systems, and plantation forestry landscapes. Specimens serve as authoritative vouchers for forestry research, silviculture trials, ecological studies, and environmental impact assessments, and they are widely used to support species identification, provenance studies, and restoration planning.&#13;
The TFRI Herbarium plays a critical role in national forestry policy and practice, informing conservation of threatened timber species, invasive species management, and reforestation programs. It also supports training and capacity building for foresters, technicians, and students, and collaborates with universities, national herbaria, and international partners to strengthen data sharing and botanical knowledge across Tanzania.</para></abstract><contact><organizationName>Tanzania Forestry Research Institute Herbarium</organizationName><phone></phone><electronicMailAddress></electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>https://scientific-collections.gbif.org/institution/47445a9b-02c2-4315-a2bb-9c9481814f0a</onlineUrl></contact><associatedParty><individualName><surName></surName></individualName><electronicMailAddress></electronicMailAddress><role>contentProvider</role></associatedParty><intellectualRights><para>To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the <ulink url="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/"><citetitle></citetitle></ulink></para></intellectualRights></dataset><additionalMetadata><metadata><symbiota id="bb3954fe-3fde-4e0d-b6bc-6566aa214e7f"><dateStamp>2026-06-01T02:31:44-07:00</dateStamp><citation identifier="22ec7d02-e780-4854-a9c8-cf73a1def678">East Africa Herbaria Portal - 22ec7d02-e780-4854-a9c8-cf73a1def678</citation><physical><characterEncoding>UTF-8</characterEncoding><dataFormat><externallyDefinedFormat><formatName>Darwin Core Archive</formatName></externallyDefinedFormat></dataFormat></physical><collection identifier="4a1763a7-449a-44c6-ae94-f35e98372aae" id="8"><alternateIdentifier>https://eastafricaherbaria.net/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=8</alternateIdentifier><parentCollectionIdentifier>TFD</parentCollectionIdentifier><collectionIdentifier>TFRI</collectionIdentifier><collectionName>Tanzania Forestry Research Institute Herbarium</collectionName><resourceLogoUrl>https://eastafricaherbaria.net/content/collicon/tfdtfri.jpeg</resourceLogoUrl><onlineUrl>https://scientific-collections.gbif.org/institution/47445a9b-02c2-4315-a2bb-9c9481814f0a</onlineUrl><intellectualRights>https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/</intellectualRights><associatedParty><individualName><surName></surName></individualName><electronicMailAddress></electronicMailAddress></associatedParty><abstract><para>&lt;p data-start="42" data-end="429"&gt;The &lt;span class="hover:entity-accent entity-underline inline cursor-pointer align-baseline"&gt;&lt;span class="whitespace-normal"&gt;Tanzania Forestry Research Institute&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt; Herbarium (TFRI) is a specialized national research collection dedicated to documenting Tanzania&amp;rsquo;s forest and woodland flora. Based at TAFORI headquarters in Morogoro, the herbarium underpins applied and scientific research focused on sustainable forest management, biodiversity conservation, restoration, and climate resilience.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p data-start="431" data-end="947"&gt;The collection emphasizes forest trees, shrubs, lianas, and associated understorey species from Tanzania&amp;rsquo;s major vegetation types, including miombo woodlands, coastal forests, montane and sub-montane forests, riverine systems, and plantation forestry landscapes. Specimens serve as authoritative vouchers for forestry research, silviculture trials, ecological studies, and environmental impact assessments, and they are widely used to support species identification, provenance studies, and restoration planning.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p data-start="949" data-end="1387"&gt;The TFRI Herbarium plays a critical role in national forestry policy and practice, informing conservation of threatened timber species, invasive species management, and reforestation programs. It also supports training and capacity building for foresters, technicians, and students, and collaborates with universities, national herbaria, and international partners to strengthen data sharing and botanical knowledge across Tanzania.&lt;/p&gt;</para></abstract></collection></symbiota></metadata></additionalMetadata></eml:eml>
