Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew' has mentioned 'World' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Mission 2 Governance 3 Kew Science 3.1 Scientific staff 3.2 Databases 3.2.1 Plants of the World Online 3.2.2 International Plant Names Index 3.2.3 Neotropikey 3.2.4 World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 3.2.5 World Checklist of Vascular Plants 3.2.6 World Checklist of Useful Plant Species 3.3 Collaborative projects 3.3.1 The Plant List 3.3.2 World Flora Online 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External links
Plants of the World Online[edit]
Main article: Plants of the World Online
Plants of the World Online is an online database launched in March 2017 as one of nine strategic outputs with the ultimate aim being "to enable users to access information on all the world's known seed-bearing plants by 2020".
World Checklist of Selected Plant Families[edit]
Main article: World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
The World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (WCSP) is a register of accepted scientific names and synonyms of 200 selected seed plant families.
World Checklist of Vascular Plants[edit]
The World Checklist of Vascular Plants (WCVP) includes all known vascular plant species (flowering plants, conifers, ferns, clubmosses and firmosses).
It is the taxonomic database for Plants of the World Online.
World Checklist of Useful Plant Species[edit]
The landscape design of Kew Botanic Gardens, their buildings and plant collections combine to form a unique testimony to developments in garden art and botanical science that were subsequently diffused around the world.
As the focus of a growing level of botanic activity, the mid 19th century garden, which overlays earlier royal landscape gardens is centred on two large iron framed glasshouses - the Palm House and the Temperate House that became models for conservatories around the world.
Criterion (ii): Since the 18th century, the Botanic Gardens of Kew have been closely associated with scientific and economic exchanges established throughout the world in the field of botany, and this is reflected in the richness of its collections.
The collections of living and stored material are used by scholars all over the world.
Kew Gardens' conservation work has continued at an international level, notably for the cataloguing of species, supporting conservation projects around the world, the implementation of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES, 1975) and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD, 1992).