Classification of communities with invasive species in the Southern Urals. I. Communities with Ambrosia species

2011 ◽  
pp. 3-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. Abramova

Associations Ambrosietum trifidae, Ambrosietum artemisiifoliae, Carduo acanthoidis—Ambrosietum psylostachyae and eight derivate communities with a presence of invasive species of North-American origin from the genus Ambrosia L.: Ambrosia artemisiifolia L., A. psilostachya DC., A. trifida L. in the Southern Urals are described. The communities belong to six classes of synantropic and natural vegetation: Stellarietea mediae, Artemisietea vulgaris, Bidentetea tripartitae, Galio-Urticetea, Polygono arenastri—Poetea annae, Molinio-Arrhenatheretea. Two Ambrosia species are widely naturalizated along the river floodplains in southwest regions of Bashkortostan Republic.

2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Sudnik-Wójcikowska

<em>Iva xanthiifolia</em> Nutt., a north-American therophyte has been recorded in Warsaw only for the last 25-40 years. Here, it occurs as a ruderal epoecophyte. It may be considered as an invasive species in the town as it spreads very quickly. The paper represents the attempt at the determination of the coenological amplitude of <em>Iva xanthiifolia</em> Nutt. It also considers syntaxonomic affiliation of the communities with this species on the grounds of the deductive method of syntaxonomic classification of anthropogenic plant communities.


2004 ◽  
pp. 3-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Z. Baisheva ◽  
A. I. Solomeshch ◽  
I. N. Grigoryev

As a result of classification of spring and brook vegetation in the Southern Urals, based upon 150 releves, 6 associations and 6 variants are totally distingui­shed, and one new association is described. The asso­ciations Cardamino amarae—Chrysosplenietum alternifolii Maas 1959 and Fontinali antipyreticae—Cardaminetum amarae ass. nov. hoc loco belong to the class Montio-Cardaminetea Br.-Bl. et R. Tx. 1943, whereas the class Platyhypnidio-Fontinalietea Phi­lippi 1956 comprises the associations Fontinalietum antipyreticae Kaiser 1926, Brachythecio rivularis—Hygrohypnetum luridi Philippi 1965, Cratoneuretum filicini Poelt 1954 and Scapanietum undulatae Schwi­ckerath 1944. The relations of listed associations to the European syntaxa are discussed.


2011 ◽  
pp. 117-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Yamalov ◽  
A. V. Bayanov ◽  
V. B. Martynenko ◽  
A. A. Muldashev ◽  
P. S. Shirokikh

Classification of the petrophytic steppe communities occurring on unique geomorphological formations of the Southern Urals (Bashkortostan Republik) — palaeoreefs (”shikhans“) have been performed. The plant communities were classified and included into two new associations (Minuartiо krascheninnikovii―Festucetum pseudovinae и Trinio muricatae―Centauretum sibiricae). Ecological, geographical, floristic and phytocoenotic characteristics of the syntaxa are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1245-1253
Author(s):  
L. M. Abramova ◽  
A. N. Mustafina ◽  
Ya. M. Golovanov ◽  
Z. M. Baymurzina ◽  
A. V. Kryukova

ISRN Ecology ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Cunze ◽  
Marion Carmen Leiblein ◽  
Oliver Tackenberg

Ambrosia artemisiifolia L., native to North America, is a problematic invasive species, because of its highly allergenic pollen. The species is expected to expand its range due to climate change. By means of ecological niche modelling (ENM), we predict habitat suitability for A. artemisiifolia in Europe under current and future climatic conditions. Overall, we compared the performance and results of 16 algorithms commonly applied in ENM. As occurrence records of invasive species may be dominated by sampling bias, we also used data from the native range. To assess the quality of the modelling approaches we assembled a new map of current occurrences of A. artemisiifolia in Europe. Our results show that ENM yields a good estimation of the potential range of A. artemisiifolia in Europe only when using the North American data. A strong sampling bias in the European Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) data for A. artemisiifolia causes unrealistic results. Using the North American data reflects the realized European distribution very well. All models predict an enlargement and a northwards shift of potential range in Central and Northern Europe during the next decades. Climate warming will lead to an increase and northwards shift of A. artemisiifolia in Europe.


2019 ◽  
pp. 3-24
Author(s):  
L. M. Abramova ◽  
Ya. M. Golovanov

This article continues the series of publications devoted to the classification of communities with invasive plant species in the Southern Urals (Abramova, 2011, 2015; Abramova, Golovanov, 2016b). The information on communities with four aggressive neophytes of North American origin Solidago canadensis L., S. gigantea Ait., Lupinus polyphyllus Lindl. and Phalacroloma annuum (L.) Dumort. s. l. (Table 1) is given. All species are included in the «black list» of the Republic of Bashkortostan (Abramova, Golovanov, 2016a), and the «Black book of the flora of Central Russia» (Vinogradova et al., 2010). The studies was conducted in the period 2016–2018 on the republic territory. The wide distribution of species and their naturalization in the meadow and semi-natural communities of the Southern Urals are noted (Abramova, 2011, 2014; Abramova et al., 2016; Abramova, Golovanov, 2018). In the centers of invasion of the studied species, 83 geobotanical relevés of communities were performed on sample areas of 10–100 mІ. Location, date, area of the described area, total cover, mean and maximum height of grass layer were indicated for each sample plot. The classification of communities involving these invasive species was carried according to Braun-Blanquet method with Kopecký–Hejný approach (Kopecký, Hejný, 1974). The identified syntaxa were compared with the units previously described in the studied area and other regions. Ecological regimes of communities are determined using the weighted average of the Landolt’s optimum ecological scales by IBIS 6.2 software (Zverev, 2007). The weighted average values are calculated according to the following scales: moisture (F), acidity (R), soil richness with mineral nutrients (N), humus content (H), light (L) and continentality (K). The Detrended correspondence analysis (DCA-ordination) method was applied using the CANOCO 4.5 software package to identify the patterns of ecological differentiation of invasive communities. Herbaceous perennials plants Solidago canadensis and S. gigantea left the decorative culture and now are naturalized in meadows along roadsides, forest edges, wastelands, fallow lands, around gardens near large cities. The most common species is S. canadensis, common in the vicinity of human settlements. S. gigantea is first recorded only in 2017 in the North-West of the republic, where it formed monodominant communities on the territory of abandoned garden plots. The ass. Rudbeckio laciniatae–Solidaginetum canadensis Tüxen et Raabe ex Anioł-Kwiatkowska 1974 (Tables 2, 3) with 2 variants: Solidago canadensis (Fig. 1) and Solidago gigantea and the derivate community Solidago canadensis–Poa angustifolia [Molinio-Arrhenatheretea/Artemisietea vulgaris] (Table 4, Fig. 2) is described. Association variants reflect the dominance of Solidago canadensis or S. gigantea, the derivative community is characterized by the presence of two large groups of species: meadow species of the class Molinio-Arrhenatheretea Tx. 1937 and sinanthropic two- and long-term species of the class Artemisietea vulgaris Lohmeyer et al. in Tx. ex von Rochow 1951. Lupinus polyphyllus is an ornamental herbaceous plant, also dissapeared fr om culture and naturalized in meadow communities. Within the studied area it is sporadically recorded in the Cis-Urals, but invasive populations of sufficiently large in size form only in the north-western districts of the republic on the territories of abandoned horticultural plots, along the roads on the meadows, occasionally on abandoned fields. A derivative community Lupinus polyphyllus[Arrhenatheretalia elatioris] (Tables 6, 7) with 2 variants: typica (Fig. 3) and Convolvulus arvensis, which represent meadow or ruderalized communities, has been identified. The annual Phalacroloma annuum is confined to the areas of the northern Cis-Urals, wh ere it is widely naturalized in meadows, but has no a transforming effect on the meadow coenoflora. Thay is why var. Phalacroloma annuum as part of the association of low-grass meadows of the hay and pasture use within ass. Agrostio tenuis–Festucetum pratensis Yamalov 2015 (Table 9) as well as derivate community Phalacroloma annuum–Cirsium setosum [Arrhenatheretalia elatioris/Artemisietea vulgaris] (Table 10) for semi-natural communities in abandoned garden plots and fields with a large proportion of synanthropic species in floristic composition are suggested. All four invasive species are intruded and naturalized in meadows of varying degrees of anthropogenic disturbance, as well as in semi-natural phytocenoses of the final stages of succession. The ordination analysis (DCA-ordination) confirmed the suggested floristic classification (Fig. 4). The first axis is associated with two differently directed factors — soil acidity (correlation coefficient — 0.10) and humus content (correlation coefficient — –0.29). The distribution of communities along the second axis is associated with the substrate moistening (correlation coefficient is 0.10) and the community light conditions (correlation coefficient is –0.57), these vectors also have different directions. All communities with these species are well differentiated in the space of the two main ordination axes, which indirectly confirms the correctness of the syntaxonomic decision, and also indicates the wide ecological amplitude of the species and their use of different ecological niches in similar types of meadow and semi-natural communities of the Southern Urals. The leading factors in the community distribution are both those characterizing the soil properties (moisture, acidity, humus content) and habitat ones (light conditions). The high invasive potential of these neophytes makes possible to predict their further distribution over the territory of the Republic of Bashkortostan.


Author(s):  
A. O. Khotylev ◽  
N. B. Devisheva ◽  
Al. V. Tevelev ◽  
V. M. Moseichuk

Within the Western slope of the Southern Urals, there are plenty of basite dyke complexes of Riphean to Vendian among Precambrian terrigenous-carbonate formations. In metamorphic formations of the Taratash complex (Archean to Early Proterozoic, the northern closure of the Bashkirian meganticlinorium) there was observed the andesitic dyke with isotopic age of 71±1 Ma (U-Pb SHRIMP II on zircons) and near Bakal two bodies of gabbroids with zircons of similar ages were found. These are the first evidence of possible Mezozoic magmatism in this region.


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