High-altitude vegetation of continental West Greenland

被引:6
|
作者
Sieg, Birgit [1 ]
Drees, Birgit [1 ]
Hasse, Thilo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Munster, Inst Plant Ecol, D-48143 Munster, Germany
关键词
altitudinal indicators; Arctic; mountain vegetation; syntaxa; toposequences; vegetation belts; QUEEN ELIZABETH ISLANDS; PLANT-COMMUNITIES; ANNOTATED CHECKLIST; ARCTIC ECOSYSTEMS; CLASSIFICATION; SVALBARD; MAP; MACARONESIA; CLIMATE; CANADA;
D O I
10.1127/0340-269X/2009/0039-0027
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The publication presents the vegetation types of the highest altitudinal vegetation belt (b) in continental West Greenland. This belt occurs at altitudes above 1200-1250 m a.s.l. and mainly comprise snowbed (Salicetea herbaceae) and scree communities (Thlaspietea) as well as fragmentarily developed fellfield vegetation (Carici-Kobresietea). The observed vegetation types are characterized and differentiated from each other as well as from related communities of the lower vegetation belt c. The borderline between these belts is mainly characterized by the disappearance of several vegetation types and plant species in belt b. Several indicators (species, vegetation types) for a distinction of these belts arc identified. The Study completes the information basis needed for the construction of a model of altitudinal vegetation belts in continental West Greenland and of a first broad scale vegetation map of this area. It also includes vegetation releves from the highest elevations (up to 1320 m a.s.l.) and with the highest species richness (95 species) known from Greenlandic mountains up to now. In the second part an altitudinal zonation hypothesis is evaluated which infers altitudinal vegetation belts from latitudinal arctic vegetation zones. Similarities and differences between vegetation belt b and the related latitudinal Bioclimate Subzone B are discussed using idealized toposequences of vegetation in Svalbard as well as additional data from the circumpolar area. It is concluded that similarities on the level of classes, alliances and even associations arc numerous especially in extreme habitats. Differences can be explained by the specific conditions In Mountain habitats such as a higher degree of oceanity and wind abrasion as well as by different species pools of the regarded
引用
收藏
页码:27 / 50
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] HIGH-ALTITUDE CARDIOMYOPATHY
    MIRRAKHIMOV, MM
    MEIMANALIEV, TS
    TERAPEVTICHESKII ARKHIV, 1983, 55 (10) : 69 - 72
  • [22] HIGH-ALTITUDE PHYSICISTS
    BERNSTEIN, J
    PHYSICS TODAY, 1988, 41 (06) : 127 - 127
  • [23] High-altitude adaptations
    Beall, CM
    LANCET, 2003, 362 : S14 - S15
  • [24] High-altitude medicine
    West, John B.
    LANCET RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 2015, 3 (01): : 12 - 13
  • [25] High-altitude retinopathy
    Lang, GE
    Kuba, GB
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 1997, 123 (03) : 418 - 420
  • [26] BLOODLETTING AT HIGH-ALTITUDE
    WINSLOW, RM
    SEMINARS IN RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 1983, 5 (02): : 188 - 194
  • [27] HIGH-ALTITUDE MEDICINE
    BEZRUCHKA, S
    MEDICAL CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 1992, 76 (06) : 1481 - 1497
  • [28] HIGH-ALTITUDE RETINOPATHY
    MCFADDEN, DM
    HOUSTON, CS
    ARNOLD, D
    SUTTON, JR
    POWLES, ACP
    GRAY, GW
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1979, : 169 - 169
  • [29] HIGH-ALTITUDE AND THE SKIN
    ENGLISH, JSC
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, 1987, 117 : 39 - 40
  • [30] ATHLETE AT HIGH-ALTITUDE
    SHEPHARD, RJ
    CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1973, 109 (03) : 207 - 209