Results 171 to 180 of about 8,891 (207)

Animal pollination contributes to more than half of citrus production. [PDF]

open access: yesSci Rep
Monasterolo M   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Phytogeography of Antarctica

Journal of Biogeography, 1984
Existing schemes of phytogeographic subdivision of Antarctica and adjacent ocean are reviewed. Russian studies which commenced in the 1950s are reviewed for the first time in the Western literature. Records of lichen and moss occurrence from seventy-five scattered locations in the Australian Antarctic Territory, eastern Antarctica, are analysed for ...
John Pickard, R. D. Seppelt
openaire   +1 more source

The phytogeography of Denmark revisited

Plant Ecology, 2002
Patterns of vascular plant diversity in Denmark are examined, based on the most recently published Danish Flora. The highest diversity is found on the major isles of Sjaelland, Mon, Falster and Bornholm, but many rare taxa occur in Jylland. Two different cluster analyses suggest a division of Denmark into six phytogeographical regions, which only ...
Lawesson, J. E., Skov, F.
openaire   +2 more sources

The phytogeography of Scotland

Botanical Journal of Scotland, 1997
Summary The phytogeography of Scotland is discussed in relation to a new phytogeographical classification of British and Irish vascular plants. The flora is dominated by species in the Temperate and Boreo-temperate major biome classes; the Southern-temperate species form the third largest group.
C.D. Preston, D.B. Roy, M.O. Hill
openaire   +1 more source

Phytogeography of patagonia

The Botanical Review, 1943
The Patagonian flora is mainly xerophytic in contrast to the hydrophytic Magellanic flora which borders it on the west. It is a complex of elements, each of which has originated from a different geographical region. The most unusual and peculiar endemics of Patagonia, for the most part plants of swales, have their closest relationships with the ...
openaire   +1 more source

Phytogeography of Continental Antarctic Lichens

The Lichenologist, 1995
Abstract The northern and southern polar regions differ substantially in topography, climate, terrestrial habitats and in their biota. The Arctic flora comprises around 900 flowering plants, 600–700 bryophytes and 2000 lichens. The Antarctic flora is depauperate by comparison with only two flowering plants, 100–120 bryophytes, and probably only ...
openaire   +1 more source

Permian phytogeography of China

Journal of Palaeosciences, 1996
Based on the characteristics, developing history and geotectonic position of different floral localities, the Permian flora of China may be divided into 13 phytoprovinces which belong to five phytoareas of four phytorealms, respectively.
Wang Jun, Shen Guanglong
openaire   +1 more source

Phytogeography of Northeast Asia

2003
Northeast Asia as defined in this study includes the Russian Far East, Northeast China, the northern part of the Korean Peninsula, and Hokkaido Island (Japan). We determined the species richness of Northeast Asia at various spatial scales, analyzed the floristic relationships among geographic regions within Northeast Asia, and compared the flora of ...
Hong Qian   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

PHYLOGENY AND PHYTOGEOGRAPHY

1989
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
openaire   +1 more source

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