The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns

Nematodes, tardigrades, bdelloid rotifers, oribatid mites and collembolans (the dominant bryofauna) were obtained and identified from the moss species Dicranum polysetum at various elevations within 3 towns of northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: Nain, Hopedale and Makkovik. A preliminary field colle...

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Main Author: Boeckner, Matthew James
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/
https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/1/Boeckner_MatthewJames.pdf
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spelling ftmemorialuniv:oai:research.library.mun.ca:10170 2023-10-01T03:56:30+02:00 The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns Boeckner, Matthew James 2003 application/pdf https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/ https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/1/Boeckner_MatthewJames.pdf en eng Memorial University of Newfoundland https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/1/Boeckner_MatthewJames.pdf Boeckner, Matthew James <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Boeckner=3AMatthew_James=3A=3A.html> (2003) The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. thesis_license Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2003 ftmemorialuniv 2023-09-03T06:47:46Z Nematodes, tardigrades, bdelloid rotifers, oribatid mites and collembolans (the dominant bryofauna) were obtained and identified from the moss species Dicranum polysetum at various elevations within 3 towns of northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: Nain, Hopedale and Makkovik. A preliminary field collection took place in October, 2001 followed by 2 further collections in June and August, 2002 which focused more on quantitative data. Twenty three nematode genera, 18 tardigrade species, 3 rotifer genera, 15 oribatid mite genera and 1 collembolan genus were identified during the study. All findings were new records for Labrador and many were significant national discoveries. -- A quantitative sampling design and multivariate analyses (non-metric multidimensional scaling) were used to examine differences in bryofaunal community structure across 4 environmental gradients: elevation, horizon depth/desiccation tolerance, seasonality and latitude. The nematodes contributed the most to understanding how variable environmental gradients affect bryofauna community structure as they had the greatest relative abundance throughout the study. The tardigrades and oribatid mites also exhibited some significantly variable distributions with regard to the environmental parameters, although fewer total specimens represented them. Bdelloid rotifers and collembolans were not quantitatively analyzed due to extremely low representation in the dataset. -- It was determined that moss horizon depth had the greatest effect on nematode, tardigrade and oribatid mite distributions. In some cases elevation and seasonality also accounted for much of the variability in bryofaunal distribution patterns but results were often variable between geographic locations. The effect of latitude on distribution patterns did not show any significant relationship to bryofaunal distribution and was likely too small of a gradient to greatly affect the bryofaunal communities. -- Some biotic relationships between bryofaunal groups were inferred and the general ... Thesis Hopedale Makkovik Nain Mite Rotifer Tardigrade Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository Canada Nain ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542) Makkovik ENVELOPE(-59.178,-59.178,55.087,55.087)
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmemorialuniv
language English
description Nematodes, tardigrades, bdelloid rotifers, oribatid mites and collembolans (the dominant bryofauna) were obtained and identified from the moss species Dicranum polysetum at various elevations within 3 towns of northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: Nain, Hopedale and Makkovik. A preliminary field collection took place in October, 2001 followed by 2 further collections in June and August, 2002 which focused more on quantitative data. Twenty three nematode genera, 18 tardigrade species, 3 rotifer genera, 15 oribatid mite genera and 1 collembolan genus were identified during the study. All findings were new records for Labrador and many were significant national discoveries. -- A quantitative sampling design and multivariate analyses (non-metric multidimensional scaling) were used to examine differences in bryofaunal community structure across 4 environmental gradients: elevation, horizon depth/desiccation tolerance, seasonality and latitude. The nematodes contributed the most to understanding how variable environmental gradients affect bryofauna community structure as they had the greatest relative abundance throughout the study. The tardigrades and oribatid mites also exhibited some significantly variable distributions with regard to the environmental parameters, although fewer total specimens represented them. Bdelloid rotifers and collembolans were not quantitatively analyzed due to extremely low representation in the dataset. -- It was determined that moss horizon depth had the greatest effect on nematode, tardigrade and oribatid mite distributions. In some cases elevation and seasonality also accounted for much of the variability in bryofaunal distribution patterns but results were often variable between geographic locations. The effect of latitude on distribution patterns did not show any significant relationship to bryofaunal distribution and was likely too small of a gradient to greatly affect the bryofaunal communities. -- Some biotic relationships between bryofaunal groups were inferred and the general ...
format Thesis
author Boeckner, Matthew James
spellingShingle Boeckner, Matthew James
The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
author_facet Boeckner, Matthew James
author_sort Boeckner, Matthew James
title The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
title_short The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
title_full The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
title_fullStr The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
title_full_unstemmed The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
title_sort ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal labrador, canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns
publisher Memorial University of Newfoundland
publishDate 2003
url https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/
https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/1/Boeckner_MatthewJames.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
ENVELOPE(-59.178,-59.178,55.087,55.087)
geographic Canada
Nain
Makkovik
geographic_facet Canada
Nain
Makkovik
genre Hopedale
Makkovik
Nain
Mite
Rotifer
Tardigrade
genre_facet Hopedale
Makkovik
Nain
Mite
Rotifer
Tardigrade
op_relation https://research.library.mun.ca/10170/1/Boeckner_MatthewJames.pdf
Boeckner, Matthew James <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Boeckner=3AMatthew_James=3A=3A.html> (2003) The ecology of bryofauna in northern, coastal Labrador, Canada: a study of the effects of elevation, moss depth, seasonality and latitude on moss fauna distribution patterns. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
op_rights thesis_license
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