
New data on vegetation of two localities in the southern part of the typical tundra subzone in the Gydan Peninsula
Author(s) -
Michail Yu. Telyatnikov,
Olga Khitun,
I. V. Czernyadjeva,
E. Yu. Kuzmina,
Ksenia Ermokhina
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
turczaninowia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 7
eISSN - 1560-7267
pISSN - 1560-7259
DOI - 10.14258/turczaninowia.24.3.1
Subject(s) - tundra , vegetation (pathology) , peninsula , geography , physical geography , geology , arctic , archaeology , oceanography , medicine , pathology
The syntaxonomic diversity of vegetation of two localities in the southern part of the typical tundra subzone in the Gydansky Peninsula includes seven associations, three subassociations and eight variants. New associations (Tanaceto bipinnati–Salicetum polaris Khitun ass. nov. hoc loco, Calliergono cordifolii–Salicetum lanatae Khitun ass. nov. hoc loco), subassociations (Hierochloo alpinae–Hylocomietum splendentis asahinetosumchrysantae Khitun subass. nov. hoc loco, Carici rariflorae–Sphagnetum baltici sphagnetosum steerei Khitun subass. nov. hoc loco) and eight variants are described in this region for the first time. Although in the northern part of the typical tundra subzone they occupy zonal positions, dwarf shrub communities with abundant herbs (Luzula tundricolae–Hylocomietum splendentis Telyatnikov et al. 2019) were not found in the studied locations. Tussock tundra (Sphagno–Eriophoretum vaginati typicum) occupies flat or gently sloping hills, and we consider it as the predominant zonal vegetation. The position of the boundary between the southern and the typical tundra subzones is corrected. According to our observations, it lies further north (up to 100 km on the eastern part of the peninsula) than it was shown on previous zoning schemes. Comparison of the syntaxonomic diversity in the southern and northern parts of the typical tundra showed little similarity, only two associations are common (Hierochloo alpinae–Hylocomietum splendentis Telyatnikov et al. 2019 and Tripleurospermo hookerii–Poetum alpigenae Czerosov, Sleptsova et Mironova 2005). We explain this by differences in local lithology: loams were predominant in the northern part and sands dominated in the southern part.