Ecotope Dimensions of Peatland Bryophyte Indicator Species along Gradients in the Mackenzie River Basin, Canada

A TWINSPAN analysis based on bryophyte species distribution and abundance divided peatlands in the Mackenzie River Basin into seven types. The analysis also selected seventeen bryophyte indicator species for each division within the classification or for the characterization of the peatland types. T...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Bryologist 1995, Vol.98 (4), p.437-451
Hauptverfasser: Nicholson, Barbara J., Gignac, L. Dennis
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A TWINSPAN analysis based on bryophyte species distribution and abundance divided peatlands in the Mackenzie River Basin into seven types. The analysis also selected seventeen bryophyte indicator species for each division within the classification or for the characterization of the peatland types. The most important environmental and climatic gradients segregating the seven types and the distribution and abundance of indicator species were pH, moss height relative to the surface water table, annual precipitation, and mean annual temperature. Ecotopes of each of the indicator species were analysed using response surfaces in ecological and climatic spaces. The southern limits of most species distributions roughly coincide with the southern limits of the Mackenzie River Basin, whereas the ranges of most species extend into more northerly areas. However, these northern extensions were in habitats other than peatlands; habitats that are not examined in this study. Species with the widest ecological and climatic ecotopes were such hummock species as Tomenthypnum nitens, Sphagnum fuscum, Polytrichum strictum, Dicranum undulatum, Pleurozium schreberi, Hylocomium splendens, and Aulacomnium palustre. The presence of permafrost has created higher peat surfaces than those found in warmer regions, and provides new habitats for hummock species. Lawn and hollow species have narrower ecotope dimensions and become infrequent in peatlands at the northern limit of the study area due to loss of suitable habitats in perennially frozen peatlands.
ISSN:0007-2745
1938-4378
DOI:10.2307/3243583