Saturday, July 27, 2019

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The San Juan Botanical Garden, also known as the Botanical Garden of the University of Puerto Rico, is located in the Caribbean city of San Juan, capital of Puerto Rico. This lush 300-acre (1.2 km2) “urban garden” of native and exotic flora serves as a laboratory for the study, conservation and enrichment of plants, trees, flowers, grasses and many other plants. Seventy-five acres are landscaped and open to the general public as well as researchers.

The entrance is located off the south side of the intersection of Highway 1 and Road 847 in Río Piedras. The “Bosque Urbano del Nuevo Milenio” or (Urban Forest of the New Millennium), a project for the conservation and growth of the urban forest, is on the eastern side of the Botanical Garden.

The botanical garden, proposed in 1959, was endorsed by the Council of Higher Education of Puerto Rico on 12 September 1969. On the initiative of Mr. Arturo Roque and supported by the President of the University, Dr. Jaime Benítez, the Botanical Garden was inaugurated on March 10, 1971.

Administratively, it functions as a part of the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez campus. Its international identification code is UPR. Fred Schaffner is the director.


The Garden was partially opened to the public from 1971 until 1989. However, in the wake of Hurricane Hugo, the Garden was closed for reconstruction until it could reopen for visitors in 1991. The Garden's botanical collections, lakes, falls and shelters are well connected by paths, roads and walkways, allowing the visitor to know and better appreciate the value of native and tropical flora.

A Master Plan is under construction which includes the development of public spaces, display exhibits, linkages for the new Tren Urbano with the University of Puerto Rico, “Bosque Urbano del Nuevo Milenio”, the Río Piedras River and floodplain restoration.

The Botanic Garden exhibits several thematic collections comprising tropical and subtropical plants. It also exhibits a collection of modern sculptures by artists from Puerto Rico and Latin America.

The Garden comprises a living laboratory for informal instruction of the community in all aspects of the native flora and the other plants which are cultivated there.

The endemic plants of Puerto Rico, including some which are threatened in the wild or in danger of extinction, are found in the northern part of the Garden. Here are the plants that the Puerto Rican botanist Agustín Stahl identified: * Argythamnia stahlii (Urb.) * Senna pendula var. stahlii (Urb.) Irwin and Barneby * Eugenia stahlii (Kiaersk.) Krug and (Urb.) * Lyonia stahlii (Urb. ) * Ternstroemia stahlii (Krug and Urb.) The genus Stahlia is represented by a single species, Stahlia monosperma (Tul.) (Urb.), found in the wild only in Puerto Rico and the eastern Dominican Republic. This species, listed as Endangered, is known in Puerto Rico under the name of Cóbana Negra.

The San Juan Botanical Garden is an institutional member of the following professional organizations:

San Juan Botanical Garden


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