This website provides access to South African plant names (taxa), specimens (herbarium sheets) and observations of plants made in the field (botanical records). Data is obtained from the Botanical Database of Southern Africa (BODATSA), which contains records from the National Herbarium in Pretoria (PRE), the Compton Herbarium in Cape Town (NBG & SAM) and the KwaZulu-Natal Herbarium in Durban (NH).
Explore our dataSend us feedbackThis website is in beta testing and is still under active development. Last updated on 28 October 2024
BODATSA brings together specimen-based data collected over a period of more than 200 years, recorded in very different formats and on very different systems. Because of the difficulties and pitfalls involved in integrating such a diverse range of data, this website makes no claims to comprehensiveness or accuracy. If you encounter an error please provide feedback, or feel free to ask us a question about BODATSA.
SANBI has a data management plan in place to improve all data. Specimen records are currently being verified, i.e. determining whether the data has been accurately translated from the specimen label to the database. Records that have been checked are marked with a date in the "Verified" field.
A geo-referencing team is verifying the coordinates of specimen records. On the map interface, blue points indicate coordinates that are accurate, and red points are not yet verified.
Can't find information about a particular species? Please note that records associated with sensitive species data (as per the National Sensitive Species List) are only available via special request; these data may not be shared or distributed in any way that may compromise or otherwise infringe the confidentiality of such information.
Request access to sensitive species data
Plans are to: add plant images to BODATSA; to migrate the living collections data from all SANBI gardens and the Millennium Seed Bank Partnership; and to migrate specimen data from three botanical garden herbaria (the Lowveld National Botanical Garden Herbarium, the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden Herbarium and the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden Herbarium). As BODATSA continues to develop and grow, we are ensuring the data meets set quality standards and that metadata are adequate to allow raw data to be interpreted.
Download the official yearly release (last updated 2023-03-23) of the South African National Plant Checklist or watch the video below to learn how to get the most up to date species names for plants occurring in South Africa
Authors of publications that use this dataset should cite the dataset in their list of references, as they do for print media.
How to cite this dataset: South African National Biodiversity Institute. 2016. Botanical Database of Southern Africa (BODATSA) [dataset]. doi: to be assigned.