Aukštaitijos nacionalinio parko ir Labanoro regioninio parko Vakarų taigos tipo nubeinės spygliuočių miškų floros įvairovė

The analysis of the structure and composition of coniferous woods belonging to the western taiga habitat type in the Aukštaitija national park and Labanoras regional park is based on 97 phytocytologic descriptions made in natural or slightly anthropogenically affected pine forests between 2014 and 2...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Šuminaitė, Ieva
Other Authors: Noreika, Remigijus
Format: Master Thesis
Language:Lithuanian
English
Published: Institutional Repository of Lithuanian University of Educational Sciences 1480
Subjects:
Online Access:http://leu.oai.elaba.lt/documents/29028286.pdf
http://leu.lvb.lt/LEU:ELABAETD29028286&prefLang=en_US
Description
Summary:The analysis of the structure and composition of coniferous woods belonging to the western taiga habitat type in the Aukštaitija national park and Labanoras regional park is based on 97 phytocytologic descriptions made in natural or slightly anthropogenically affected pine forests between 2014 and 2017. The western taiga habitat type is described as comprised of old natural coniferous and mixed forests, including newly developing coniferous and deciduous forests where the anthropogenic footprint is low or non-existent. From the 27 studied pine forests, at least four match the minimum habitat requirements and can be considered to belong to the western taiga habitat type. The studied flora of western taiga type habitat in the Aukštaitija national park and the Labanoras regional park is comprised of 85 species of plants belonging to 44 families. In terms of systematics and quantity, the distribution of plant families and species of the western taiga type differs from that of the Republic of Lithuania. The highest ranking is the family Ericaceae. Based on the analysis of different stand age groups in the studied territories, it was determined that the composition of plant species in natural coniferous forests is rather stable and differs insignificantly. However, there are certain plant species that are more numerous and more frequently occurring in certain stand age groups. The following are the most numerous and frequently occurring species: P. schreberi, H. splendens, P. crista-castrensis, D. polysetum, V. myrtillus, V. vitis-idaea, M. pratense, C. vulgaris, C. canescens, L. pilosa, Cladonia spp. Different habitat types differ based on composition and on how frequently different plant species occur. The most common species typical of western taiga are G. repens, L. annotinum, L. abietina, A. uva-ursi, P. media, L. borealis, T. europaea and Ch. umbellata which occur more frequently in the Nb1-type habitat, whereas more common to the Na1 habitat are P. patens, L. clavatum, D. complanatum. The correlation between plants growing in pine forests, the age of stand and habitat type in the Aukštaitija national park and the Labanoras regional park was determined by utilizing the phi coefficient. The results show that C. canescens, Th. serpyllum, Cladonia spp., C. islandica are more typical of the Na1 habitat type, whereas C. arundinacea, P. aquilinum, G. repens, C. majalis, H. splendens, growing in more fertile soil, are typical to the Nb1 habitat type. Plant species typical of the third stand age category [120-170] are G. repens, L. pilosa, C. arundinacea, L. annotinum, C. majalis and O. acetosella. Finally, O. secunda, H. umbellatum and P. officinarum are typical of the [40-90) year age group.