Fungarium
A fungarium (plural: fungaria) is a curated collection of preserved fungal specimens and their associated data. Once known as mycological herbaria, these collections provide a permanent record for scientific research. The term was adopted in 2010 to distinguish fungal collections from herbaria (plant collections), in keeping with the modern biological recognition of fungi as a kingdom distinct from plants. Many fungaria are housed within herbaria or other natural history collections, and their holdings may include dried fruiting bodies, host material bearing microscopic fungi, permanent microscope slides, and historically important type specimens.
Fungaria developed out of older botanical and mycological collecting traditions and are now found in museums, universities, botanical institutes, and plant-pathology centres. Their specimens are prepared, labelled, stored, and organized so that they can be studied over long periods, and they are commonly accompanied by notes, images, and other documentation. While some collections emphasize large fungi like mushrooms and bracket fungi, others preserve micromycetes (microfungi) alongside their host plants. These preserved specimens differ from living cultures, but researchers often use both to study fungal classification and evolution.
These collections are used for tracking environmental changes; by comparing specimens across centuries, researchers can model species shifts and changes in biological timing caused by climate change. In modern biology, fungaria provide a library of genetic material for DNA barcoding and genomics, allowing scientists to extract and sequence DNA even from centuries-old specimens. Specimen data are increasingly digitized and shared through online portals using data standards such as Darwin Core. As of 2025, an estimated 15 to 20 million preserved fungal specimens exist worldwide, distributed across approximately 3,900 herbaria and fungaria.