scholarly journals Communities with Myrica gale L. in mires of the Gulf of Finland coast (St. Petersburg and Leningrad Region)

2021 ◽  
pp. 58-74
Author(s):  
E. A. Volkova ◽  
V. A. Smagin ◽  
V. N. Khramtsov

Сommunities of Myrica gale L. (sweet gale), their ecology and geography in coastal mires of the Gulf of Finland within St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region on the Southeastern border of their range are described based on 70 relevés, made in 1981–2018. This species is included in the Red Data Books of Russia (2008), Leningrad Region (2018), St. Petersburg (2018), and Republic of Karelia (2007). The distribution of the communities in the studied area is as follows (Fig. 1) — the Yuntolovskiy reserve (the largest population), vicinity of the Lisiy Nos ­settlement, forest-park “Gagarka”, Tarkhovskiy Mys, Yuntolovskiy fo­rest-park (within St. Petersburg); vicinity of the Pesochnoe ­settlement, the Bolshoy Berye­zovyy Isl., near the port “Primorsk” (the Nor­thern coast of the Gulf of Finland) and the vicinity of Bolshaya Izhora ­settlement (Southern coast of the latter) in the Leningrad Region area. Communities are found mainly in coastal mires of various types (raised bogs, transitional mires, fens) in the place of former lagoons and in inter-dune depressions in different trophic conditions; most diverse in the last two. Communities are assigned into 12 associations, two of which with the shrub layer formed by Myrica gale. Sphagnetum myricosum galis is the most common association in transitional mires (Table 3). The communities are two-layers: Myrica gale shrub one and closed moss layer of Sphagnum species of diffe­rent ecological groups. The association is subdivided into 3 subassociations by dominanting Sphagnum species and groups of determinant species: sphagnosum angustifolii, sphagnosum flexuosi, and sphagnosum teretis. The communities of this association are located­ in newly formed mires, and their species composition is in the process of formation. These are succession stages between the fens and transitional mires. The ass. Myricetum caricosum lasiocarpae (table 4) includes communities of fens with close (50 to 80  %) Myrica gale shrub layer. Carex lasiocarpa is the dominant of the herb layer, in some communities there is the lower herb sublayer of Comarum palustre. There is no moss layer. Association Myricetum comaroso–betulosum with sparse Betula pubescens 5–12 m high tree layer is also recorded in fens (Table 4). Communities of the ass. Salicetum myricoso–paludiherbosum with the dominance of shrub willows and Myrica gale are rather widespread in coastal fens. They have closed (up to 100 %) shrub layer formed by various willows and M. gale. The composition and cover of paludal herbaceous species is variable, the only constant, sometimes abundant, species is Comarum palustre. The association is subdivided into 3 subassociations (salicosum phylicifoliae, salicosum phylicifoliae-myrsinifoliae and salicosum rosmarinifoliae-myrsinifoliae) according to the dominating willows and mire grasses. Besides the above associations with high abundance of Myrica gale, this species occurs with low abundance in the communities of other, often widespread mire associations, as their coastal variants (Tables 2–4). The discussed community types in the Leningrad Region and St. Petersburg have regional features and differ in species composition from the sweet gale communities of Western and Northern Europe. Due to the rarity in the European part of Russia communities with both low abundance and dominance of Myrica gale need protection as well as their habitats.

Author(s):  
Vera A. Stepanova

In this paper, based on the results of our own research and data from the literature, a description of the association of most species of araphid diatoms with various substrates in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland is given.


Author(s):  
Aliya F. Luknitskaya

The Kurgalsky Nature Complex Reserve is located in the Kingisepp District of the Leningrad Region, 45 km northwest of Kingisepp. The territory of the reserve includes the Kurgalsky peninsula, as well as the adjacent waters of the Gulf of Finland. The Kader swamp massif is located in the south of the Kurgalsky Peninsula. The state of the autochthonous vegetation cover of the Kader swamp was considered in connection with the laying of the main gas pipeline under «the Nord Stream–2» project. The revealed high diversity of desmids (48 species), as well as their abundance, the frequency of occurrence and the presence of species rare in other habitats of the Leningrad region, indicates the inviolability of the freshwater algae flora, favorable environmental conditions in water bodies and the absence of anthropogenic transformation of the studied territory.


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 453-466
Author(s):  
I. S. Stepanchikova ◽  
A. A. Rodionova ◽  
D. E. Himelbrant ◽  
J. Motiejūnaitė

A lichen checklist for Maly Island (Leningrad Region, Russia) comprises 160 species, including 150 lichens, 9 lichenicolous fungi and 1 non-lichenized saprobic fungus. Lecidella effugiens is new to North-Western European Russia, Diplotomma pharcidium and Taeniolella delicata are new to the Leningrad Region. The lichen biota of Maly Island is relatively poor due to natural and anthropogenic factors: the island is small, sandy, lacking rocky outcrops, with low diversity of plant communities; all its forests are disturbed and young. The most valuable habitats for lichens on Maly Island are seashore communities and open pine stands on sand.


2010 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 237-244
Author(s):  
I. S. Stepanchikova ◽  
D. E. Himelbrant ◽  
M. Kukwa ◽  
E. S. Kuznetsova

Forty six species of lichens and allied fungi are firstly reported for protected areas of the Gulf of Finland Shore within the limits of St. Petersburg. Three of them (Calicium denigratum, Lecanora expallens and Pertusaria pupillaris) are new for St. Petersburg. One species — Verrucaria bryoctona — is new for the whole Leningrad Region.


Author(s):  
D.A. Kraskov ◽  
◽  
T.P. Lutsko

The Gulf of Finland plays an important role in many aspects of the activities of people living in St. Petersburg and the Leningrad region, based on this, it is necessary to control the chemical composition of the waters of the Gulf of Finland in order to avoid unwanted complications from animal health.


2012 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 279-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. G. Leushina

Vyborgsky Sanctuary occupies the coastal zone of the Gulf of Finland and Vyborg Bay, the northern part of the Kiperort Peninsula, Lisy Island and about 40 adjacent small islands. The annotated list of 171 moss species and brief analysis of the moss flora are provided. Aulacomnium androgynum (Hedw.) Schwagr. is included in The Red Data Book of Russia (2008), Ulota drummondii (Hook. et Grev.) Brid. is new for the Leningrad Region and 9 species are protected in the Leningrad Region.


2020 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 101-132
Author(s):  
Irina Stepanchikova ◽  
Dmitry Himelbrant ◽  
Ekaterina Kuznetsova ◽  
Jurga Motiejūnaitė ◽  
Sergey Chesnokov ◽  
...  

We present a lichen checklist for the northern shore of the Gulf of Finland in the limits of St. Petersburg, Russia. This area has diverse lichen biota within the city limits, and has been comprehensively studied since 1893, which gives a good base for analysis of historical changes in lichen diversity. The documented lichen biota comprises 469 species (430 lichenized, 24 lichenicolous, 3 facultatively lichenicolous, and 12 non-lichenized saprobic fungi), of them 191 species are known from herbaria and literature for the period before 1991, and 436 species were recorded since 1991 to 2019. Thirty-three taxa were excluded from the lichen list of the study area as erroneous or dubious records. Altogether 48 species are new to St. Petersburg, including: Lecidea malmeana and Micarea czarnotae – new to Russia; Caloplaca lucifuga, Gyalecta nigricans, Micarea soralifera – new to European Russia; Agonimia flabelliformis, Endococcus verrucosus, Lecania turicensis, Micarea fallax, M. tomentosa, Xanthomendoza huculica – new to Northwestern European Russia; Lichenoconium lichenicola, Ramalina europaea, Sarcogyne hypophaea – not known also from the Leningrad Region. The studied lichen biota is moderately rich compared to other city territories. The history of economic development of the region has caused its serious transformation, degradation of natural habitats and therefore partial loss of lichen diversity. At the same time, human-made substrates and anthropogenic plant communities are inhabited by lichens, including species unknown in the natural habitats of the study area. However, 44 species recorded in the study area are red-listed in St. Petersburg, with 13 of them known only from historical collections. Forest communities, as well as historical parks, in NW part of St. Petersburg are important source of biodiversity on regional level nowadays and hopefully in future, and deserve protection.


2008 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 277-287
Author(s):  
L. E. Kurbatova

104 moss species were found in the vicinities of Portovaya Bay of the Gulf of Finland. The annotated list of species includes information on habitats, substrate and sporophyte production for every species. The peculiarities of moss flora are considered. One of the recorded species — Aulacomnium androgynum — is rare and protected in Russia.


2004 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaljo Voolma ◽  
Mikhail Mandelshtam ◽  
Alexander Shcherbakov ◽  
Eugene Yakovlev ◽  
Heino Õunap ◽  
...  

Along-term faunistic study of bark beetles (Coleoptera: Scolytidae), conducted in Estonia, as well as in Karelia, Leningrad (St. Petersburg) and Murmansk provinces of Russia, enables a comparison of the species composition of bark beetles in the regions bordering Finland. Altogether the distribution patterns of 83 species of scolytids are examined. The northern borders of the distribution range for Scolytus scolytus, S. multistriatus, S. laevis, Hylastes ater, H. opacus, Orthotomicus longicollis, Pityogenes trepanatus, Ips amitinus and Cryphalus abietis in Northern Europe are redefined. The list of bark beetles for Estonia and North- Western Russia (Karelia, Leningrad and Murmansk provinces) with their occurrence in some biogeographical provinces of Fennoscandia (Ik, Kl, Kon, Ks, Kk, Lim) is given. Recent records of bark beetles, endangered or rare in Finland, and their current distribution in the neighbouring regions are discussed.


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