Primary plant succession on freshly degraded yedoma (ice complex) in Lena delta (Eastern Siberia)

Primary plant succession was studied on freshly eroded yedoma in the southern part of Lena River Delta. Four stages of vegetation development were clearly distinguished. The first stage starts on bare ground and lasts from two-three months to one year. Its vegetation is represented only by fragmente...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:BIO Web of Conferences
Main Authors: Laschinskiy Nikolay, Faguet Alexey, Biasi Christina
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
French
Published: EDP Sciences 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/bioconf/20202400047
https://doaj.org/article/29a1a6dcf2d2417c87877535a365ba08
Description
Summary:Primary plant succession was studied on freshly eroded yedoma in the southern part of Lena River Delta. Four stages of vegetation development were clearly distinguished. The first stage starts on bare ground and lasts from two-three months to one year. Its vegetation is represented only by fragmented cover of young mosses and a few seedlings of vascular plants. The most abundant moss species at this moment is Ceratodon purpureus. The second stage lasts from one to three years depending on slope steepness. Plants cover 20 to 60% of the soil surface. Main dominants are Descurainia sophioides and Tephroseris palustris. The third stage of succession presented by closed species-poor grasslands with Arctagrostis arundinacea as main dominant. This stage lasts for up to 20 years. The fourth stage is represented by species-rich herbaceous communities, which also have Arctagrostis arundinacea as main dominant but enriched with many perennial herbs. There is not enough data to determine the duration of this stage but it is at least few tens of years. This successional system requires a long time for its development. It means that IC degradation is not a recent process but accompanied yedoma deposits through all of its history.