Return of the megaherbs: plant colonisation of derelict ANARE station buildings on sub-Antarctic Heard Island

Polar Record ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Whinam ◽  
P.M. Selkirk ◽  
A.J. Downing ◽  
Bruce Hull

Buildings were constructed and artefacts left behind on sub-Antarctic Heard Island, associated with Antarctic research expeditions since 1926. Both bryophytes and vascular plants are colonising many parts of the now derelict buildings. On these structures and artefacts, the authors recorded four species of vascular plants out of the 11 that occur on Heard Island and nine species of mosses out of the 37 recorded from Heard Island. The vascular plant species most frequently recorded colonising structures and artefacts was Pringlea antiscorbutica (288 occurrences), with the area colonised varying from 0.3 cm2 to 430.0 cm2. Muelleriella crassifolia was the moss species that was most frequently recorded (14 occurrences), colonising areas from 2.1 cm2 to 12.9 cm2. The highest number of bryophyte species (seven) was recorded on the stone and cement of the ‘water tank.’ Pringlea antiscorbutica, Poa cookii, Azorella selago, Muelleriella crassifolia, Bryum dichotomum, Dicranoweisia brevipes and Schistidium apocarpum are all expected to continue to colonise the ANARE ruins, as well as areas that have become available since building removal and also possibly areas bared by further deglaciation.

1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 1095-1099 ◽  
Author(s):  
John G. Packer ◽  
G. D. McPherson

Chromosome numbers are reported for a number of vascular plant species collected in the vicinity of Barrow, Umiat, and Meade River, northern Alaska.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (10) ◽  
pp. 756 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca J. Deans ◽  
Miguel de Salas ◽  
Jason A. Smith ◽  
Alex C. Bissember

Tasmania is the south-eastern island state of Australia. It is geographically isolated and is recognised for both its rich diversity of plant species and high degree of endemism. Although 530 endemic Tasmanian vascular plant species are known, natural products have only been isolated from 27 of these species (~5.1 %), representing 3 classes (Dicotyledonae, Monocotyledonae, and Gymnospermae), 12 families, and 14 genera. Terpenoids, flavonoids, and alkaloids are the major classes of compound that have been isolated from these species. This report provides the first review of the natural products isolated from endemic Tasmanian plant species and covers ~70 years of research in this area.


2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jana Májeková ◽  
Dominik Roman Letz ◽  
Michal Slezák ◽  
Marica Zaliberová ◽  
Richard Hrivnák

Abstract The paper presents data on the occurrence and secondary spreading of rare and threatened vascular plant species in railway habitats of Slovakia. We recorded 17 threatened vascular plant species and other 9 species that we considered to be rare in Slovakia. They grew at railway stations, mainly directly in the rail yard and also at the platforms or other similar facilities. Records of further 39 species were excerpted from literature sources. More native thermophilous species were represented among the recorded species as railway substrates provide suitable conditions for their growth. Also some archaeophytic segetal species were found quite frequent in the studied biotopes due to spreading of their seeds together with cereals transported by trains. Various habitats of railway transport facilities often provide suitable conditions for the secondary occurrence and further spreading not only of synanthropic or adventive, but also of rare and threatened plant species.


Author(s):  
Krystyna Towpasz

The paper presents the occurrence of vascular plant species in the southern part of the Pilzno commune based on monographic studies from the area of Ciężkowice and Strzyżów Foothills (Western Carpathians). The study contains a list of plant species, both native and of alien origin. For each species its habitat and sites in the ATPOL network were given.


Botany ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stella Rose Waxwing ◽  
Dylan Fischer ◽  
Joseph A. Antos ◽  
Abir Biswas ◽  
Donald B. Zobel

Responses in bryophyte communities following volcanic disturbance are not well understood. The eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980 deposited large amounts of tephra (aerially transported volcanic ejecta) on nearby forests in southwestern Washington and presented an opportunity to examine bryophyte succession, with a focus on mosses. We examined moss community changes over 36 years following this disturbance using permanent plots located in old-growth conifer forests. We used an experimental design where some of the plots had tephra removed shortly after the eruption. Initial dramatic decreases in total bryophyte cover, moss species richness and diversity in plots with intact tephra were followed by increases by 2016. Community profiles also shifted through time but were somewhat site-specific. Moss community change was related to changes in vascular plant species and was driven by changes in a few key moss species with distinct growth strategies. Bryophyte change through time was most pronounced in tephra-impacted plots, but differed among sites. Overall, total bryophyte cover had recovered, reaching our estimate of pre-disturbance levels at all sites after 36 years, but trajectories of change differed among sites, demonstrating the importance of idiosyncratic site factors and dynamics of the vascular plant species.


Author(s):  
Do Cong Ba

The flora at Tan Trao historical site, Tuyen Quang province is quite rich and varied. Initially, there were 726 species, 462 genera, 137 families, belonging to 6 vascular plant species. Among them, Magnoliophyta has the largest number of 669 species (accounting for 92.15%), 427 (accounting for 92.42%) and 115 families (accounting for 83.94%). Followed by the Polypodiophyta with 39 species (5.37%), 25 genera (5.41%), 13 families (9.49%). Psilotophyta, Lycopodiophyta, Equisetophyta, Pinophyta are the rest. The Magnoliophyta is the most diversified, with 5.82 species per family and 3.71 families per family. The survival spectrum of the Tan Trao historical flora was determined as SB = 73.55 Ph + 3.17 Ch + 9.78 He + 8.40 Cr + 5.10 Th. For the value of use, medicinal plants have the most abundant species with 470 species, timber trees have 188 species, 142 species are eatable, 99 species are ornamental plants, 64 species are for animal feed,  50 species are giving attar , 28 species  are fibre plants,11 species are used for handicrafts, 5 species of dyes, and the lowest of 3 species for sap plants.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 28-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. Baranovski

Nowadays, bioecological characteristics of species are the basis for flora and vegetation studying on the different levels. Bioecological characteristics of species is required in process of flora studying on the different levels such as biotopes or phytocenoses, floras of particular areas (floras of ecologically homogeneous habitats), and floras of certain territories. Ramensky scale is the one of first detailed ecological scales on plant species ordination in relation to various environmental factors; it developed in 1938 (Ramensky, 1971). A little later (1941), Pogrebnyak’s scale of forest stands was proposed. Ellenberg’s system developed in 1950 (Ellenberg, 1979) and Tsyganov’s system (Tsyganov, 1975) are best known as the systems of ecological scales on vascular plant species; these systems represent of habitat detection by ecotopic ecomorphs of plant species (phytoindication). Basically, the system proposed by Alexander Lyutsianovich Belgard was the one of first system of plant species that identiified ectomorphs in relation to environmental factors. As early as 1950, Belgard developed the tabulated system of ecomorphs using the Latin ecomorphs abbreviation; he also used the terminology proposed in the late 19th century by Dekandol (1956) and Warming (1903), as well as terminology of other authors. The article analyzes the features of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs on vascular plants. It has certain significance and advantages over other systems of ecomorphs. The use of abbreviated Latin names of ecomorphs in tabular form enables the use shortened form of ones. In the working scheme of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs relation of species to environmental factors are represented in the abbreviated Latin alphabetic version (Belgard, 1950). Combined into table, the ecomorphic analysis of plant species within association (ecological certification of species), biotope or area site (water area) gives an explicit pattern on ecological structure of flora within surveyed community, biotope or landscape, and on environmental conditions. Development and application by Belgrard the cenomorphs as «species’ adaptation to phytocenosis as a whole» were completely new in the development of systems of ecomorphs and, in this connection, different coenomorphs were distinguished. Like any concept, the system of ecomorphs by Belgard has the possibility and necessity to be developed and added. Long-time researches and analysis of literature sources allow to propose a new coenomorph in the context of Belgard’s system of ecomorphs development: silvomargoant (species of forest margin, from the Latin words margo – edge, boundary (Dvoretsky, 1976), margo – margin, ad margins silvarum – along the deciduous forest margins). As an example of ecomorphic characterization of species according to the system of ecomorphs by Belgard (when the abbreviated Latin ecomorph names are used in tabular form and the proposed cenomorph is used), it was given the part of the table on vascular plants ecomorphs in the National Nature Park «Orelsky» (Baranovsky et al). The Belgard’s system of ecomorphs is particularly convenient and can be successfully applied to data processing in the ecological analysis of the flora on wide areas with significant species richness, and the proposed ecomorph will be another necessary element in the Belgard’s system of ecomorphs. 


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