Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia

Three major alpine plant communities were identified on Lakeview Mountain, Cathedral Provincial Park, using multivariate analysis of percentage cover data. Communities were dominated by Kobresia myosuroides, Carex scirpoidea (with one transitional area dominated by both Kobresia myosuroides and Care...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23995
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-23995
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-239952018-01-05T17:42:22Z Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean Three major alpine plant communities were identified on Lakeview Mountain, Cathedral Provincial Park, using multivariate analysis of percentage cover data. Communities were dominated by Kobresia myosuroides, Carex scirpoidea (with one transitional area dominated by both Kobresia myosuroides and Carex scirpoidea), or by Carex scirpoidea and Carex capitata (with Salix nivalis as an additional dominant at one site). Community composition and distribution had little relationship with aspect or with the soils and microclimatic factors measured. Phenology was recorded for vascular species during the summer of 1980. Later flowering times were observed for a number of species in Kobresia myosuroides or Carex scirpoidea/Carex capitata dominated vegetation, and plants generally flowered earlier on southern aspects. Small scale patterns in the form of significant associations between species-pairs were detected in all communities, using a plotless point-line sampling technique. Patterns were abundant at this scale, with a total of 182 significant positive associations and 103 significant negative associations recorded between different species pairs. These interspecific associations varied considerably between sampled sites in the study area, with many occurring only once. Possible association-generating mechanisms have been discussed, and characteristics of the genotype, rather than the taxonomic species, have been suggested as critical in the formation of associations. A competitive hierarchy of dominant species has also been proposed, based on interspecific association and phenological data. Soils within the study area are classified as Alpine Dystric Brunisols, and are coarse textured, strongly acidic, low in available nutrients, and high in organic matter. Climate was relatively uniform over the study area during the 1980 growing season, as were microclimatic air and soil temperature profiles and air humidity profiles. Lower soil temperatures, however, occurred beneath Kobresia myosuroides dominated vegetation. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate 2010-04-21T20:12:50Z 2010-04-21T20:12:50Z 1983 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23995 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Three major alpine plant communities were identified on Lakeview Mountain, Cathedral Provincial Park, using multivariate analysis of percentage cover data. Communities were dominated by Kobresia myosuroides, Carex scirpoidea (with one transitional area dominated by both Kobresia myosuroides and Carex scirpoidea), or by Carex scirpoidea and Carex capitata (with Salix nivalis as an additional dominant at one site). Community composition and distribution had little relationship with aspect or with the soils and microclimatic factors measured. Phenology was recorded for vascular species during the summer of 1980. Later flowering times were observed for a number of species in Kobresia myosuroides or Carex scirpoidea/Carex capitata dominated vegetation, and plants generally flowered earlier on southern aspects. Small scale patterns in the form of significant associations between species-pairs were detected in all communities, using a plotless point-line sampling technique. Patterns were abundant at this scale, with a total of 182 significant positive associations and 103 significant negative associations recorded between different species pairs. These interspecific associations varied considerably between sampled sites in the study area, with many occurring only once. Possible association-generating mechanisms have been discussed, and characteristics of the genotype, rather than the taxonomic species, have been suggested as critical in the formation of associations. A competitive hierarchy of dominant species has also been proposed, based on interspecific association and phenological data. Soils within the study area are classified as Alpine Dystric Brunisols, and are coarse textured, strongly acidic, low in available nutrients, and high in organic matter. Climate was relatively uniform over the study area during the 1980 growing season, as were microclimatic air and soil temperature profiles and air humidity profiles. Lower soil temperatures, however, occurred beneath Kobresia myosuroides dominated vegetation. === Science, Faculty of === Botany, Department of === Graduate
author Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean
spellingShingle Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean
Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
author_facet Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean
author_sort Ratcliffe, Marilyn Jean
title Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
title_short Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
title_full Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
title_fullStr Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on Lakeview Mountain, Southern British Columbia
title_sort interspecific associations, phenology, and environment of some alpine plant communities on lakeview mountain, southern british columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23995
work_keys_str_mv AT ratcliffemarilynjean interspecificassociationsphenologyandenvironmentofsomealpineplantcommunitiesonlakeviewmountainsouthernbritishcolumbia
_version_ 1718592415550406656