ARCTIC Strategies of Survival in Plants of the Fennoscandian Tundra
ABSTRACT. Many arctic species originated outside the Arctic and some of their physiological responses are similar to those in temperate latitudes. Unique adaptations to the Arctic have rarely been found. The recent influx of other species has, however, broken down reproductive barriers and gene flow...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
Published: |
1990
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Online Access: | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.564.2424 http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic44-2-95.pdf |
Summary: | ABSTRACT. Many arctic species originated outside the Arctic and some of their physiological responses are similar to those in temperate latitudes. Unique adaptations to the Arctic have rarely been found. The recent influx of other species has, however, broken down reproductive barriers and gene flow has been stimulated. In extreme arctic environments, selection forces driving evolution are mainly of the physical environment and plant interactions are positive. Elsewhere, biotic factors, such as herbivory, are important and plant interactions become negative through competition. Physical selective forces operate in winter and summer. Low winter temperatures rarely affect arctic plants, but snow depth and duration influence species distributions. Deep and persistent snow deforms plants and limits the period of resource acquisition. Cryptogams are common in such snow beds. Little or no snow cover exposes plants to abrasion by wind-blown particles and desiccation. In such fell-field sites, deciduous species and xerophytes, such as evergreen cushion plants, are common. Arctic summers are short and developmental processes are extended beyond one growing season, with perennials predominating. Cushion plants efficiently increase their temperatures above ambient, while evergreen and deciduous ericaceous dwarf shrubs coexist and have complementary strategies for intercepting radiation in a low canopy. ”hndra soils are generally infertile and may be disturbed by freezehhaw cycles. Nutrients are conserved by recycling within shoots and between ramets within clones. Vegetative proliferation enhances the survival of young ramets, while physiological integration between ramets enables young ramets to forage across patchy environments. |
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