Distribution and habitat niches of 37 peatland Cyperaceae species across a broad geographic range in Canada

2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (9) ◽  
pp. 1292-1313 ◽  
Author(s):  
L D Gignac ◽  
R Gauthier ◽  
L Rochefort ◽  
J Bubier

The presence and absence of 37 Cyperaceae species found on 498 peatlands across Canada were examined along surface water chemistry, shade, height above the water table, and climatic gradients. A canonical correspondence analysis of the species distribution along the environmental gradients indicated that surface water chemistry and climate were highly correlated with the first and second axes and were the two most important gradients distinguishing among groups. The climatic gradient was further subdivided into western oceanic continental and eastern oceanic continental gradients. Height above the water table and shade were correlated to the third canonical correspondence analysis axis and were of secondary importance in explaining species distributions. A TWINSPAN analysis of the species separated them into eight groups: (1) widespread, obligate rich fen, wet, shade-tolerant species; (2) widespread rich fen preferential species; (3) continental and eastern oceanic, rich fen preferential, wet, shade-intolerant species; (4) widespread fen, wet, shade-intolerant species; (5) widespread bog or fen, shade-tolerant species; (6) widespread subcontinental and oceanic, bog or fen, shade-intolerant species; (7) eastern subcontinental and oceanic, poor fen preferential species; (8) western oceanic, bog and poor fen preferential, shade-intolerant species. Response surfaces were generated by quantifying the frequency of occurrence of representative species in each group along pH and height above the water table, shade and mean annual temperature, and mean annual total precipitation gradients. Frequency of occurrence values for several of the rarer species indicated that they were not limited by the number of suitable habitats analyzed in this study but by other factors such as competition, failure to establish, or dispersal. This study emphasizes the importance of habitat and climate in determining the local and regional diversity and distribution of the most common Cyperaceae on peatlands in Canada.Key words: sedges, Carex, peat lands, response surfaces, climate, water chemistry.

1995 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 587-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale H. Vitt ◽  
Suzanne E. Bayley ◽  
Tai-Long Jin

Surface and subsurface (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 m depths) water was sampled weekly in 1989 and biweekly in 1990 during the ice-free season along a bog-rich fen gradient in central Alberta. Acidity–alkalinity were most closely related to peatland type and were the most useful parameters for characterizing peatlands. Potassium, nitrogen, and phosphorus concentrations were more related to season, year, or peatland–year interactions and cannot be used to categorize the bog–fen gradient. Hydrogen ion, ammonium, alkalinity, and corrected conductivity were relatively constant throughout the ice-free season, while total metal ions (Al, Fe, Mn, and Zn), base cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+), nitrate, and components of phosphorus fluctuated seasonally. Nitrate remained constant with depth in all peatland types, whereas ammonium increased with depth. Relationships of surface water chemistry to pH for all sites showed three patterns: a positive and highly significant correlation with little seasonal variation within peatland types (base cations, alkalinity, and corrected conductivity); less significant correlation with strong seasonal variation within peatland types (N and P); and a general negative and highly significant correlation with some seasonal variation in peatland types (metals and S). Water temperatures increased along the bog-rich fen gradient.


1990 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 696-711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale H. Vitt ◽  
Diana G. Horton ◽  
Nancy G. Slack ◽  
Nils Malmer

Vegetation from 133 relevés representing a broad spectrum of peatland types from the Prince Rupert area, British Columbia was divided into six relevé groups. The 210 taxa found in these relevés were classified into six species groups. In general, the species groups are related to one another along shade and height (above water level) gradients. Chemical and physiographic gradients that correlate with the relevé distribution pattern on a detrended correspondence analysis ordination are surface water chemistry, shade, and height. In particular, the major gradient influencing the first axis of the ordination is shade. The second axis of the ordination is related to a complex chemical gradient in which hydrogen ion, calcium, and sulphate are the most important components. These chemical changes are influenced by ombrotrophy. Surface water chemistry patterns show enriched ionic conditions on Graham Island (Queen Charlotte Islands), with a decrease inland. Especially important is the decrease of sodium and chloride ion. The peatlands studied include ombrotrophic bogs and soligenous fens. Raised bogs were found in basins, whereas blanket bogs occurred on gentle slopes at the most oceanic site. Pinuscontorta Loud. var. contorta is most abundant on ombrotrophic sites, whereas Chamaecyparisnootkatensis (Lamb.) Spach is dominant in soligenous fens. Soligenous poor fen, characterized by high Sphagnum abundance in lawns and forest islands and pH of 4.4–6.6, is the peatland type most frequently encountered in the study area.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Cleaver ◽  
Heather Jamieson ◽  
Carrie Rickwood ◽  
Philippa Huntsman

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