Entrance
Type=Botanic Garden
Location= Mirpur, Bangladesh
Area-84 hectares
Created -1961
Operated by-Department of Forestry, Ministry of Environment and Forests.
Status-Open all year
The National Botanical Garden of Bangladesh, also referred to as Bangladesh National Herbarium, is the largest plant conservation center in Bangladesh, with an area of around 84 hectares (210 acres). It is located at Mirpur in Dhaka, beside the Dhaka Zoo. It is one of the greatest botanical gardens of Bangladesh and a tourist destination.
Baldha Garden in the Wari area of Dhaka is administratively part of the National Garden.
National Botanical Garden of Bangladesh actually referred to Bangladesh National Herbarium is a scientific organization where plant specimens collected from different parts of the country are documented and preserved as reference material. It is the largest plant conservation center of Bangladesh. Covering an area of about 84 ha of land, it is located at Mirpur, in Dhaka right beside the Zoo. It is one of the greatest botanical gardens of Bangladesh and a tourist destination.
History
The issue of establishing a herbarium in Dhaka was raised by the Department of Botany, university of Dhaka during the UNESCO symposium on Scientific Problems of Humid Tropical Deltas held in Dhaka in March 1964. FR Fosberg, the chairman of the visiting committee for tropical herbaria, held a discussion with the head of the Department of Botany, University of Dhaka on the issue and submitted a report to the government of East Pakistan emphasizing the immediate need for establishing a herbarium. A proposal with a similar objective was submitted by the Department of Botany, University of Dhaka to the Secretary, Agricultural Research Council of Pakistan (ARCP) and resubmitted in 1966 incorporating certain additional items as desired by the Council. The proposal named the 'Botanical Survey of East Pakistan' was finally sanctioned by ARCP with a budget of Tk 2,25,400 for a period of five years. Initially it was manned by only two full-time botanists, one plant illustrator and a typist-clerk.
After the independence of Bangladesh in 1971 it was renamed as the Botanical Survey of Bangladesh. The Ministry provided funds for the salaries of the staff until the end of the financial year 1971-72. Subsequently it was funded by the Ministry of Forests, fisheries and livestock for the year 1972-73. However, the funding was discontinued after one year as no budgetary provision was made for this project for the fiscal year 1973-74.
By this time, the newly formed bangladesh agricultural research council (BARC) had started functioning. The project was resubmitted for consideration to BARC, and it was financed for one year (1973-74). In July 1975, the project started functioning as a control project of BARC under the name Bangladesh National Herbarium, initially for a period of three years. In 1994, under a notification of the Cabinet Division, the Bangladesh National Herbarium was transferred to the care of the Ministry of Environment and Forests. On the recommendation of the Natural Resources Division of the British High Commission in Bangladesh, the British Oversees Development Agency (ODA, at present called Department for International Development) committed to act as a donor for the construction of a permanent herbarium in the Mirpur botanical garden, to provide training facilities to scientists and to equip the herbarium with laboratories and library.
Collection
Bangladesh National Herbarium is highly enriched in terms of its collection of different species of plants and trees. The garden houses nearly 56,125 species of trees, herbs, and shrubs including a large collection of aquatic plants across its 200 acre site. Many exotic plants have been introduced in the garden and acclimatized, and are routinely propagated under the local climatic condition
Special collection
Rare and exotic plant species in the garden include:
Anthurium (Anthurium crystallinum)
Camphor (Cinamomum camphora)
Rabbit fern (Davallia canariensis)
Dambia (Dombeya spectabilis)
White rangan (Ixora superba)
Little mussanda (Mussaenda luteola)
Amazon lily (Victoria amazonica)
Harhjora (Vitis quadrangularis)
African tulip (Spathodea campanulata)
Sambucuas (Sambucus nigra)
White chandan (Santalum album).
Features
The garden is divided into 57 sections. The garden houses cactus house, lily pond, Amazon Lily pond, six lakes, tissue culture research center, two nurseries, orchid house, two net houses, five shadow rooms, nine visitors’ shadow rooms, three food corners, eight toilets, two watch towers, an artificial lake and a lotus pond.
Photo of Botanical Garden
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