Results 51 to 60 of about 9,816 (197)
Biological Flora of Britain and Ireland: Geranium sylvaticum*
Geranium sylvaticum is a perennial forb of upland grasslands, woodlands and riverbanks in northern Britain, with scattered native occurrences also in Wales, central England and Northern Ireland. It has an extensive native range in Europe and Asia. The species is gynodioecious, with individual plants typically female or hermaphrodite.
Markus Wagner +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Published as part of Becherer, 1956, Florae Vallesiacae Supplementum, pp.
openaire +1 more source
Changing management from light sheep grazing to light cattle grazing restored vegetation at a calcareous upland site. There was an increase in species richness, calcareous grassland indicators and bryophyte cover and a decrease in grass cover. There was, however, also a decrease in vegetation height.
George Porton +14 more
wiley +1 more source
Treeless vegetation of the Australian Alps [PDF]
Based on 1222 floristic quadrat samples, 56 plant communities were identified in treeless vegetation in the Australian Alps of south-eastern Australia. (c. 35º 30´–38ºS, 146°–149°E). The study encompassed vegetation from above the upper limit of trees on
McDougall, Keith L., Walsh, Neville G.
core
Taxonomic results of the Bryotrop expedition to Zaire and Rwanda : 3., description of dollecting sites, the vegetation of Kahuzi-Biega-National Park/Zaire, Nyungwe Forest and Virunga volcanoes/Rwanda [PDF]
During the BRYOTROP-Expedition in 1991, 71 collecting sites could be visited. These are situated in the Kahuzi-Biega-National Park/Zaire, the Nyungwe Forest and the Virunga volcanoes/Rwanda.
Fischer, Eberhard
core
Se dan a conocer cinco nuevos registros para la flora vascular de Chile continental, correspondientes a Adesmia hemisphaerica Hauman (Fabaceae), Carex argentina Barros (Cyperaceae), Luzula parvula Barros (Juncaceae), Oxychloë bisexualis Kuntze y Oxychloë
Nicolás García
doaj
Extreme rain‐on‐snow events forming basal‐ice can shape high Arctic plant communities as strongly as summer warming. Icing delays soil warming and early growth but compensatory responses follow, at the cost of reproduction. Summer warming offsets most icing impacts, enhancing growth and reversing phenological delays, though inflorescence remains ...
Mathilde Le Moullec +9 more
wiley +1 more source
The response of species in the ground cover of a Bilberry type Spruce stand to logging
The results of research into the changes occurring in the ground cover of bilberry spruce forests in the north-taiga subzone of the Arkhangelsk Region in the first five years after clear-cutting are reported.
Nadezhda Genikova +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Published as part of Becherer, 1956, Florae Vallesiacae Supplementum, pp.
openaire +1 more source
Findings indicate that the impact of heavy rainfall events on plant growth in the High Arctic is mediated by seasonal timing and local moisture regimes. Late summer rainfall can extend the growing season for plants experiencing end‐of‐season water‐limitation by delaying onset of senescence.
Rúna Í. Magnússon +6 more
wiley +1 more source

