Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve • Common

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve • Common Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve Flora • Common Name (Order Family Genus species) Monocotyledons • Adder's-mouth, White (Orchidales Orchidaceae Malaxis monophyllos brachypoda) • Alkaligrass, Creeping (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Puccinellia phryganodes) • Alkaligrass, Dwarf (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Puccinellia pumila) • Arrowgrass, Gaspé Peninsula (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin gaspensis) • Arrowgrass, Marsh (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin palustris) • Arrowgrass, Seaside (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin maritima) • Arrowgrass, Marsh (Najadales Juncaginaceae Triglochin palustris) • Asphodel, Scottish False (Liliales Liliaceae Tofieldia pusilla) • Barley, Foxtail (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Hordeum jubatum) • Beak-rush, White (Cyperales Cyperaceae Rhynchospora alba) • Bentgrass, Creeping (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Agrostis stolonifera) • Bentgrass, Green (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Calamagrostis stricta) • Bentgrass, Rough (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Agrostis scabra) • Bluegrass, Alpine (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa alpina) • Bluegrass, Annua (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa annua) • Bluegrass, Arctic (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa arctica) • Bluegrass, Glaucous (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa glauca) • Bluegrass, Wood (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa nemoralis) • Bluegrass, Marsh (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa palustris) • Bluegrass, Kentucky (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa pratensis alpigena) • Bluegrass, Kentucky (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Poa pratensis pratensis) • Brome, Awnless (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Bromus inermis) • Brome, Fringed (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Bromus ciliatus) • Brookgrass (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Catabrosa aquatica) • Bulrush, Alpine (Cyperales Cyperaceae Trichophorum alpinum) • Bulrush, Common Three-square (Cyperales Cyperaceae Schoenoplectus pungens) • Bulrush, Cosmopolitan (Cyperales Cyperaceae Bolboschoenus maritimus) • Bulrush, Little (Cyperales Cyperaceae Trichophorum pumilum) • Bulrush, Red (Cyperales Cyperaceae Blysmopsis rufa) • Bulrush, Small flowered (Cyperales Cyperaceae Scirpus microcarpus) • Bulrush, Softstem (Cyperales Cyperaceae Schoenoplectus tabernaemontani) • Bulrush, Tufted (Cyperales Cyperaceae Trichophorum cespitosum) • Bur-reed, Giant (Typhales Sparganiaceae Sparganium eurycarpum) • Bur-reed, Narrowleaf (Typhales Sparganiaceae Sparganium angustifolium) • Bur-reed, Northern (Typhales Sparganiaceae Sparganium hyperboreum) • Bur-reed, Small (Typhales Sparganiaceae Sparganium natans) • Cattail (Typhales Typhaceae Typha sp.) • Chives (Liliales Liliaceae Allium schoenoprasum) • Clintonia, Yellow (Liliales Liliaceae Clintonia borealis) • Coral-root, Pale (Orchidales Orchidaceae Corallorhiza trifida) • Coral-root, Spotted (Orchidales Orchidaceae Corallorhiza maculata) • Cordgrass, Smooth (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Spartina alterniflora) • Cottongrass, Chamisso's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Eriophorum chamissonis) • Cottongrass, Green-keeled (Cyperales Cyperaceae Eriophorum viridi-carinatum) • Cottongrass, Narrow-leaved (Cyperales Cyperaceae Eriophorum angustifolium angustifolium) • Cottongrass, Sheathed (Cyperales Cyperaceae Eriophorum vaginatum) • Deathcamas, Mountain (Liliales Liliaceae Zigadenus elegans glaucus) • Duckweed, Lesser (Arales Lemnaceae Lemna minor) • Eelgrass, Common (Najadales Zosteraceae Zostera marina) • Fescue, Red (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Festuca rubra) • Grass, Blue Lyme (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Leymus arenarius) • Grass, Slender Blue-eyed (Liliales Iridaceae Sisyrinchium montanum) • Hairgrass, Common (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Deschampsia flexuosa) • Hairgrass, Tufted (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Deschampsia cespitosa) • Iris, Beachhead (Liliales Iridaceae Iris setosa) • Iris, Blue Flag (Liliales Iridaceae Iris versicolor) • Ladies'-tresses, Hooded (Orchidales Orchidaceae Spiranthes romanzoffiana) • Lady's-slipper, Large Yellow (Orchidales Orchidaceae Cypripedium parviflorum pubescens) • Lady's-slipper, Pink (Orchidales Orchidaceae Cypripedium acaule) • Lady's-slipper, Sparrow's Egg (Orchidales Orchidaceae Cypripedium passerinum) • Lily, Wild Calla (Arales Araceae Calla palustris) • Lily-of-the-valley, False (Liliales Liliaceae Maianthemum canadense) • Mannagrass, Fowl (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Glyceria striata) • Mannagrass, Northern (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Glyceria borealis) • Marramgrass, American (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Ammophila breviligulata) • Muhly, Marsh (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Muhlenbergia glomerata) • Oatgrass, Poverty (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Danthonia spicata) • Oatgrass, Purple (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Schizachne purpurascens) • Orchid, Green Adder's-mouth (Orchidales Orchidaceae Malaxis unifolia) • Orchid, Hooker's (Orchidales Orchidaceae Platanthera hookeri) • Orchid, Large Round-leaved (Orchidales Orchidaceae Platanthera orbiculata orbiculata) • Orchid, Leafy (Orchidales Orchidaceae Platanthera hyperborea) • Orchid, Round leaved (Orchidales Orchidaceae Amerorchis rotundifolia) • Orchid, Small Northern Bog (Orchidales Orchidaceae Platanthera obtusata) • Orchid, White Bog (Orchidales Orchidaceae Platanthera dilatata) • Plantain, Checkered Rattlesnake (Orchidales Orchidaceae Goodyera tesselata) • Plantain, Dwarf Rattlesnake (Orchidales Orchidaceae Goodyera repens) • Pondweed, Broad-leaved (Najadales Potamogetonaceae Potamogeton natans) • Pondweed, Fine-leaved (Najadales Potamogetonaceae Stuckenia filiformis) • Pondweed, Flat-stalked (Najadales Potamogetonaceae Potamogeton friesii) • Pondweed, Grass-leaved (Najadales Potamogetonaceae Potamogeton gramineus) • Pondweed, Northern (Najadales Potamogetonaceae Potamogeton alpinus) • Quackgrass (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Elymus repens) • Reed, Drooping Wood (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Cinna latifolia) • Reedgrass, Bluejoint (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Calamagrostis canadensis) • Reedgrass, Northern (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Calamagrostis stricta inexpansa inexpansa) • Ricegrass, White-grained Mountain (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Oryzopsis asperifolia) • Rush, Alpine (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus alpinoarticulatus) • Rush, Bog (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus stygius americanus) • Rush, Kobres' (Juncales Cyperaceae Kobresia simpliciuscula) • Rush, Short-tailed (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus brevicaudatus) • Rush, Slender (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus tenuis) • Rush, Toad (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus bufonius) • Rush, Whitish (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus triglumis albescens) • Rush, Wiry (Juncales Juncaceae Juncus arcticus balticus) • Rye, Virginia Wild (Poales Poaceae/Graminae Elymus virginicus) • Sawgrass, Smooth (Cyperales Cyperaceae Cladium mariscoides) • Sedge, Aquatic (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex aquatilis) • Sedge, Beaked (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex rostrata) • Sedge, Bebb's (Cyperales Cyperaceae (Carex bebbii) • Sedge, Bigelow's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex bigelowii) • Sedge, Bladder (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex vesicaria) • Sedge, Bristle-leaf (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex eburnea) • Sedge, Bristle-stalked (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex leptalea) • Sedge, Brown Bog (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex buxbaumii) • Sedge, Brownish (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex brunnescens) • Sedge, Coast (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex exilis) • Sedge, Crawe's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex crawei) • Sedge, Crawford's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex crawfordii) • Sedge, Curly (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex rupestris) • Sedge, Cuspidate (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex recta) • Sedge, Depressed (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex deflexa) • Sedge, Dry-spike (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex foenea) • Sedge, Few flowered (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex pauciflora) • Sedge, Few seeded Bog (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex microglochin) • Sedge, Garber's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex garberi) • Sedge, Golden (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex aurea) • Sedge, Greenish (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex viridula) • Sedge, Hair-like (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex capillaris) • Sedge, Hair-like (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex viridula brachyrrhyncha elatior) • Sedge, Hairy-fruited (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex lasiocarpa) • Sedge, Hoppner's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex subspathacea) • Sedge, Inland (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex interior) • Sedge, Lake (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex lacustris) • Sedge, Lenticular (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex lenticularis) • Sedge, Lesser Panicled (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex diandra) • Sedge, Lesser Saltmarsh (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex glareosa) • Sedge, Livid (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex livida) • Sedge, Looseflower Alpine (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex rariflora) • Sedge, Low Northern (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex concinna) • Sedge, Mackenzie's (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex mackenziei) • Sedge, Mud (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex limosa) • Sedge, Necklace (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex projecta) • Sedge, Northern Bog (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex gynocrates) • Sedge, Prickly (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex echinata) • Sedge, Salt marsh (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex salina) • Sedge, Scaly (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex paleacea) • Sedge, Sheathed (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex vaginata) • Sedge, Short-scale (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex deweyana) • Sedge, Silvery (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex canescens) • Sedge, Sterile (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex sterilis) • Sedge, Stipitate (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex stipata) • Sedge, String-root (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex chordorrhiza) • Sedge, Stunted (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex magellanica irrigua) • Sedge, Swinging (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex vacillans) • Sedge, Tawny (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex hostiana) • Sedge, Three fruited (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex trisperma) • Sedge, Tussock (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex stricta) • Sedge, Two seeded (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex disperma) • Sedge, Yellow (Cyperales Cyperaceae Carex flava) •
Recommended publications
  • Revision and Checklist of the Moss Families Bartramiaceae and Mniaceae in Vietnam Timo KOPONEN1, Thanh-Luc NGUYEN2, Thien-Tam L
    Hattoria 10: 69–107. 2019 Revision and checklist of the moss families Bartramiaceae and Mniaceae in Vietnam Timo KOPONEN1, Thanh-Luc NGUYEN2, Thien-Tam LUONG3, 4 & Sanna HUTTUNEN4 1 Finnish-Chinese Botanical Foundation, Mailantie 109, FI-08800 Lohja, Finland & Finnish Museum of Natural History, Botany Unit (bryology), P.O. Box 7 (Unioninkatu 4), FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland 2 Southern Institute of Ecology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 1 Mac Dinh Chi, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam 3 University of Science, Vietnam National University Ho Chi Minh City, 227 Nguyen Van Cu, District 5, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam 4 Herbarium (TUR), Biodiversity Unit, FI 20014 University of Turku, Finland Author for correspondence: Thanh-Luc NGUYEN, [email protected] Abstract The genera Fleischerobryum Loeske and Philonotis Brid. of the Bartramiaceae and the family Mniaceae (excluding Pohlia Hedw.) are revised for Vietnam, based on specimens studied and literature reports. Four species are added to the flora: Orthomnion javense (M.Fleisch.) T.J.Kop., Philonotis asperifolia Mitt., P. laii T.J.Kop., P. speciosa (Griff.) Mitt. syn. nov. (based on P. mercieri Paris & Broth.), and Plagiomnium wui (T.J.Kop.) Y.J.Yi & S.He. Eight species are excluded from the flora. Two taxa are considered doubtful. The flora now includes one species of Fleischerobryum, eight species of Philonotis, one species of Mnium Hedw. (doubtful), three species of Orthomnion Wills. and five species of Plagiomnium (one doubtful). The 15 species are divided into phytogeographical elements. Eight belong to the Southeast Asiatic temperate to meridional element, and seven to the Southeast Asiatic meridional to subtropical element.
    [Show full text]
  • Likely to Have Habitat Within Iras That ALLOW Road
    Item 3a - Sensitive Species National Master List By Region and Species Group Not likely to have habitat within IRAs Not likely to have Federal Likely to have habitat that DO NOT ALLOW habitat within IRAs Candidate within IRAs that DO Likely to have habitat road (re)construction that ALLOW road Forest Service Species Under NOT ALLOW road within IRAs that ALLOW but could be (re)construction but Species Scientific Name Common Name Species Group Region ESA (re)construction? road (re)construction? affected? could be affected? Bufo boreas boreas Boreal Western Toad Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Plethodon vandykei idahoensis Coeur D'Alene Salamander Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Rana pipiens Northern Leopard Frog Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Accipiter gentilis Northern Goshawk Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Ammodramus bairdii Baird's Sparrow Bird 1 No No Yes No No Anthus spragueii Sprague's Pipit Bird 1 No No Yes No No Centrocercus urophasianus Sage Grouse Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Cygnus buccinator Trumpeter Swan Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Falco peregrinus anatum American Peregrine Falcon Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Gavia immer Common Loon Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Histrionicus histrionicus Harlequin Duck Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Lanius ludovicianus Loggerhead Shrike Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Oreortyx pictus Mountain Quail Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Otus flammeolus Flammulated Owl Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Picoides albolarvatus White-Headed Woodpecker Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Picoides arcticus Black-Backed Woodpecker Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Speotyto cunicularia Burrowing
    [Show full text]
  • Coastal Landscaping in Massachusetts Plant List
    Coastal Landscaping in Massachusetts Plant List This PDF document provides additional information to supplement the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) Coastal Landscaping website. The plants listed below are good choices for the rugged coastal conditions of Massachusetts. The Coastal Beach Plant List, Coastal Dune Plant List, and Coastal Bank Plant List give recommended species for each specified location (some species overlap because they thrive in various conditions). Photos and descriptions of selected species can be found on the following pages: • Grasses and Perennials • Shrubs and Groundcovers • Trees CZM recommends using native plants wherever possible. The vast majority of the plants listed below are native (which, for purposes of this fact sheet, means they occur naturally in eastern Massachusetts). Certain non-native species with specific coastal landscaping advantages that are not known to be invasive have also been listed. These plants are labeled “not native,” and their state or country of origin is provided. (See definitions for native plant species and non-native plant species at the end of this fact sheet.) Coastal Beach Plant List Plant List for Sheltered Intertidal Areas Sheltered intertidal areas (between the low-tide and high-tide line) of beach, marsh, and even rocky environments are home to particular plant species that can tolerate extreme fluctuations in water, salinity, and temperature. The following plants are appropriate for these conditions along the Massachusetts coast. Black Grass (Juncus gerardii) native Marsh Elder (Iva frutescens) native Saltmarsh Cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) native Saltmeadow Cordgrass (Spartina patens) native Sea Lavender (Limonium carolinianum or nashii) native Spike Grass (Distichlis spicata) native Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) native Plant List for a Dry Beach Dry beach areas are home to plants that can tolerate wind, wind-blown sand, salt spray, and regular interaction with waves and flood waters.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to Common Native & Invasive Freshwater Plants in Alaska
    Introduction to Common Native & Potential Invasive Freshwater Plants in Alaska Cover photographs by (top to bottom, left to right): Tara Chestnut/Hannah E. Anderson, Jamie Fenneman, Vanessa Morgan, Dana Visalli, Jamie Fenneman, Lynda K. Moore and Denny Lassuy. Introduction to Common Native & Potential Invasive Freshwater Plants in Alaska This document is based on An Aquatic Plant Identification Manual for Washington’s Freshwater Plants, which was modified with permission from the Washington State Department of Ecology, by the Center for Lakes and Reservoirs at Portland State University for Alaska Department of Fish and Game US Fish & Wildlife Service - Coastal Program US Fish & Wildlife Service - Aquatic Invasive Species Program December 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments ............................................................................ x Introduction Overview ............................................................................. xvi How to Use This Manual .................................................... xvi Categories of Special Interest Imperiled, Rare and Uncommon Aquatic Species ..................... xx Indigenous Peoples Use of Aquatic Plants .............................. xxi Invasive Aquatic Plants Impacts ................................................................................. xxi Vectors ................................................................................. xxii Prevention Tips .................................................... xxii Early Detection and Reporting
    [Show full text]
  • Resilient Plants for the Beach Communities
    Resilient Plants for the Beach Communities 1 | Page Table of Contents Native Plants for Costal Dunes............................................................................................ 4 Grasses and Grass like Plants .......................................................................................... 5 Ammophila breviligulata ............................................................................................. 6 Panicum amarum ‘var. arnaruium’ ............................................................................. 7 Panicum virgatum ....................................................................................................... 8 Spartina patens ........................................................................................................... 9 Herbaceous Plants ........................................................................................................ 10 Baptisia tinctoria ....................................................................................................... 11 Liatris pilosa v. pilosa (graminifolia) ......................................................................... 12 Nuttallanthus canadensis.......................................................................................... 13 Oenothera biennis .................................................................................................... 14 Opuntia compressa ................................................................................................... 15 Solidago sempervirens .............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Representation of Tundra Vegetation by Pollen in Lake Sediments of Northern Alaska W
    Journal of Biogeography, 30, 521–535 Representation of tundra vegetation by pollen in lake sediments of northern Alaska W. Wyatt Oswald1,2*, Patricia M. Anderson2, Linda B. Brubaker1, Feng Sheng Hu3 and Daniel R. Engstrom41College of Forest Resources, 2Quaternary Research Center, Box 351360, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA, 3Departments of Biology and Geology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, USA and 4St Croix Watershed Research Station, Science Museum of Minnesota, St Croix, MN, USA Abstract Aim To understand better the representation of arctic tundra vegetation by pollen data, we analysed pollen assemblages and pollen accumulation rates (PARs) in the surface sediments of lakes. Location Modern sediment samples were collected from seventy-eight lakes located in the Arctic Foothills and Arctic Coastal Plain regions of northern Alaska. Methods For seventy of the lakes, we analysed pollen and spores in the upper 2 cm of the sediment and calculated the relative abundance of each taxon (pollen percentages). For eleven of the lakes, we used 210Pb analysis to determine sediment accumulation rates, and analysed pollen in the upper 10–15 cm of the sediment to estimate modern PARs. Using a detailed land-cover map of northern Alaska, we assigned each study site to one of five tundra types: moist dwarf-shrub tussock-graminoid tundra (DST), moist graminoid prostrate-shrub tundra (PST) (coastal and inland types), low-shrub tundra (LST) and wet graminoid tundra (WGT). Results Mapped pollen percentages and multivariate comparison of the pollen data using discriminant analysis show that pollen assemblages vary along the main north– south vegetational and climatic gradients.
    [Show full text]
  • (Neonympha M. Mitchellii) in Michigan: Final Report — 2000
    Surveys for the Recovery of Mitchells Satyr Butterfly (Neonympha m. mitchellii) in Michigan: Final Report - 2000 Prepared by: Daria A. Hyde, Mary L. Rabe, David L. Cuthrell, Michael A. Kost Michigan Natural Features Inventory P.O. Box 30444 Lansing, MI 48909-7944 For: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 3 Endangered Species Office Federal Building, Fort Snelling Twin Cities, MN 55111 Report Number 2001-05 Submitted March 31, 2001 Cover Photo Identification and Credits: Prairie fen habitat photo by: Michael A. Kost Mitchells satyr photo by: Daria A. Hyde Table of Contents Introduction .................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Methods ........................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Mitchells Satyr Surveys and Threat Assessment ......................................................................................................... 4 Surveys for Associated Rare Species ........................................................................................................................... 4 Mitchells Satyr Monitoring ......................................................................................................................................... 6 Michells Satyr Oviposition Observations and Larval Searches .................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Plant Life Magill’S Encyclopedia of Science
    MAGILLS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE PLANT LIFE MAGILLS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE PLANT LIFE Volume 4 Sustainable Forestry–Zygomycetes Indexes Editor Bryan D. Ness, Ph.D. Pacific Union College, Department of Biology Project Editor Christina J. Moose Salem Press, Inc. Pasadena, California Hackensack, New Jersey Editor in Chief: Dawn P. Dawson Managing Editor: Christina J. Moose Photograph Editor: Philip Bader Manuscript Editor: Elizabeth Ferry Slocum Production Editor: Joyce I. Buchea Assistant Editor: Andrea E. Miller Page Design and Graphics: James Hutson Research Supervisor: Jeffry Jensen Layout: William Zimmerman Acquisitions Editor: Mark Rehn Illustrator: Kimberly L. Dawson Kurnizki Copyright © 2003, by Salem Press, Inc. All rights in this book are reserved. No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner what- soever or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy,recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information address the publisher, Salem Press, Inc., P.O. Box 50062, Pasadena, California 91115. Some of the updated and revised essays in this work originally appeared in Magill’s Survey of Science: Life Science (1991), Magill’s Survey of Science: Life Science, Supplement (1998), Natural Resources (1998), Encyclopedia of Genetics (1999), Encyclopedia of Environmental Issues (2000), World Geography (2001), and Earth Science (2001). ∞ The paper used in these volumes conforms to the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, Z39.48-1992 (R1997). Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Magill’s encyclopedia of science : plant life / edited by Bryan D.
    [Show full text]
  • Moss Occurrences in Yugyd Va National Park, Subpolar and Northern Urals, European North-East Russia
    Biodiversity Data Journal 7: e32307 doi: 10.3897/BDJ.7.e32307 Data Paper Moss occurrences in Yugyd Va National Park, Subpolar and Northern Urals, European North-East Russia Galina Zheleznova‡, Tatyana Shubina‡, Svetlana Degteva‡‡, Ivan Chadin , Mikhail Rubtsov‡ ‡ Institute of Biology of Komi Scientific Centre of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Syktyvkar, Russia Corresponding author: Tatyana Shubina ([email protected]) Academic editor: Yasen Mutafchiev Received: 10 Dec 2018 | Accepted: 25 Mar 2019 | Published: 01 Apr 2019 Citation: Zheleznova G, Shubina T, Degteva S, Chadin I, Rubtsov M (2019) Moss occurrences in Yugyd Va National Park, Subpolar and Northern Urals, European North-East Russia. Biodiversity Data Journal 7: e32307. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.7.e32307 Abstract Background This study produced a dataset containing information on moss occurrences in the territory of Yugyd Va National Park, located in the Subpolar and Northern Urals, European North- East Russia. The dataset summarises occurrences noted by long-term bryological explorations in remote areas of the Subpolar and Northern Urals from 1943 to 2015 and from studies published since 1915. The dataset consists of 4,120 occurrence records. The occurrence data were extracted from herbarium specimen labels (3,833 records) and data from published literature (287 records). Most of the records (4,104) are georeferenced. A total of 302 moss taxa belonging to 112 genera and 36 families are reported herein to occur in Yugyd Va National Park. The diversity of bryophytes in this National Park has not yet been fully explored and further exploration will lead to more taxa.
    [Show full text]
  • Autumn Willow in Rocky Mountain Region the Black Hills National
    United States Department of Agriculture Conservation Assessment Forest Service for the Autumn Willow in Rocky Mountain Region the Black Hills National Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota and Forest Custer, South Dakota Wyoming April 2003 J.Hope Hornbeck, Carolyn Hull Sieg, and Deanna J. Reyher Species Assessment of Autumn willow in the Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota and Wyoming J. Hope Hornbeck, Carolyn Hull Sieg and Deanna J. Reyher J. Hope Hornbeck is a Botanist with the Black Hills National Forest in Custer, South Dakota. She completed a B.S. in Environmental Biology (botany emphasis) at The University of Montana and a M.S. in Plant Biology (plant community ecology emphasis) at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Carolyn Hull Sieg is a Research Plant Ecologist with the Rocky Mountain Research Station in Flagstaff, Arizona. She completed a B.S. in Wildlife Biology and M.S. in Range Science from Colorado State University and a Ph.D. in Range and Wildlife Management (fire ecology) at Texas Tech University. Deanna J. Reyher is Ecologist/Soil Scientist with the Black Hills National Forest in Custer, South Dakota. She completed a B.S. degree in Agronomy (soil science and crop production emphasis) from the University of Nebraska – Lincoln. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Autumn willow, Salix serissima (Bailey) Fern., is an obligate wetland shrub that occurs in fens and bogs in the northeastern United States and eastern Canada. Disjunct populations of autumn willow occur in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Only two populations occur on Black Hills National Forest lands: a large population at McIntosh Fen and a small population on Middle Boxelder Creek.
    [Show full text]
  • The Use of Dna Barcoding to Address Major Taxonomic Problems for Rare British Bryophytes
    THE USE OF DNA BARCODING TO ADDRESS MAJOR TAXONOMIC PROBLEMS FOR RARE BRITISH BRYOPHYTES FINAL REVISED REPORT FEBRUARY 2013 David Bell David Long Pete Hollingsworth Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh With major contribution from D.T. Holyoak (Bryum) CONTENTS 1. Executive summary……………………………………………………………… 3 2. Introduction……………………………………………………………………… 4 3. Methods 3.1 Sampling……………………………………………………………….. 6 3.2 DNA extraction & sequencing…………………………………………. 7 3.3 Data analysis…………………………………………………………… 9 4. Results 4.1 Sequencing success…………………………………………………….. 9 4.2 Species accounts 4.2.1 Atrichum angustatum ………………………………………… 10 4.2.2 Barbilophozia kunzeana ………………………………………13 4.2.3 Bryum spp……………………………………………………. 16 4.2.4 Cephaloziella spp…………………………………………….. 26 4.2.5 Ceratodon conicus …………………………………………… 29 4.2.6 Ditrichum cornubicum & D. plumbicola …………………….. 32 4.2.7 Ephemerum cohaerens ……………………………………….. 36 4.2.8 Eurhynchiastrum pulchellum ………………………………… 36 4.2.9 Leiocolea rutheana …………………………………………... 39 4.2.10 Marsupella profunda ……………………………………….. 42 4.2.11 Orthotrichum pallens & O. pumilum ……………………….. 45 4.2.12 Pallavicinia lyellii …………………………………………... 48 4.2.13 Rhytidiadelphus subpinnatus ……………………………….. 49 4.2.14 Riccia bifurca & R. canaliculata ………………………........ 51 4.2.15 Sphaerocarpos texanus ……………………………………... 54 4.2.16 Sphagnum balticum ………………………………………… 57 4.2.17 Thamnobryum angustifolium & T. cataractarum …………... 60 4.2.18 Tortula freibergii …………………………………………… 62 5. Conclusions……………………………………………………………………… 65 6. Dissemination of results…………………………………………………………
    [Show full text]
  • Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Species List, Version 2018-07-24
    Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Species List, version 2018-07-24 Kenai National Wildlife Refuge biology staff July 24, 2018 2 Cover image: map of 16,213 georeferenced occurrence records included in the checklist. Contents Contents 3 Introduction 5 Purpose............................................................ 5 About the list......................................................... 5 Acknowledgments....................................................... 5 Native species 7 Vertebrates .......................................................... 7 Invertebrates ......................................................... 55 Vascular Plants........................................................ 91 Bryophytes ..........................................................164 Other Plants .........................................................171 Chromista...........................................................171 Fungi .............................................................173 Protozoans ..........................................................186 Non-native species 187 Vertebrates ..........................................................187 Invertebrates .........................................................187 Vascular Plants........................................................190 Extirpated species 207 Vertebrates ..........................................................207 Vascular Plants........................................................207 Change log 211 References 213 Index 215 3 Introduction Purpose to avoid implying
    [Show full text]