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Plant classification
Botanists group plants into families according to their characteristics
of flowers, leaves, stems, fruit and roots, nowadays supplemented
by advanced techniques such as studies of gene sequences. This grouping
process is known as classification and it allows botanists to organise
their knowledge of the plant kingdom.
The classification system used at Kew is known as the Bentham-Hooker
classification. This was devised by Sir Joseph Hooker, and another
distinguished Kew botanist, George Bentham. At the time, it reflected
views of evolutionary relationships of plants. Since then, botanists
working at Kew and other botanical institutions around the world
have improved the classification so that it reflects current thinking
on plant evolution.
Kew's Herbarium contains a collection of over 7.5 million specimens
of preserved plants, all classified and arranged according to this
system.
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