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The characteristics of a relic steppe of Northeast Asia: refuges of the Pleistocene Mammoth steppe (an example from the Lower Kolyma area)
Author(s) -
М. В. Щелчкова,
S. P. Davydov,
D. G. Fyodorov-Davydov,
A. I. Davydova,
Г. Г. Боескоров
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
iop conference series earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.179
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/438/1/012025
Subject(s) - steppe , humus , ecology , soil water , arid , environmental science , pleistocene , subarctic climate , geology , biology , paleontology
An ecosystem of a relic petrophytic steppe was studied in the Lower Kolyma River region. The soils of the steppe area significantly differed from those of the surrounding open larch forests in the following features: the presence of humus-accumulative horizons with a high content of roots; low moisture content; high heat supply; an extremely contrasting temperature regime; neutral reaction; decreased potential acidity; higher humification of organic matter; accumulation of exchangeable bases, soluble salts and organic nitrogen; and the presence of carbonate neoformations in the form of cutans on pebbly units. They also had a high microorganism saturation of the soil profile, a high share of actinomycetes in the microbial community, as is typical for arid soils, and a shift in the ratio of potential enzyme activities toward oxidoreductases, which reflects a deeper destruction of plant residues and more intensive humus formation. The petrophytic steppe had high bioproductivity. The growth rate of the aboveground phytomass (ANP) was closer to the true steppes of Central Asia than to the zonal tundras of the Arctic and Subarctic; such communities can serve as models for paleoreconstructions and study of the Late Pleistocene cold steppes - mammoth fauna large grazing mammals habitats.

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