GISlayersMima2011.zip
Isolated populations of four reindeer lichen species and varieties co-occur in a unique relict prairie habitat at Mima Mounds Natural Area Preserve, southwest Washington State, USA. The prairie is the type locality for mima mounds, unusual geologic features providing topographical variation that inf...
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Online Access: | https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/datasets/wp988p790 |
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ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:wp988p790 2024-09-15T18:32:15+00:00 GISlayersMima2011.zip McCune, Bruce Smith, Robert Alphandary, Elisa Arvidson, Rheannon Bono, Gina Chipman, Bridget Corkery, Andrew DiMeglio, Joseph Hansen, Kimberly Isch, Katrina McAlpine, Jesse Marks-Fife, Chad Mead, Brad Miller, Daniel Nolte, Nathan Ottombrino, Ashley Prior, Tamra Streich, Jared Theis, Susan Vandruff, Stephanie Wesseler, Christina Wesseler, Kimberly Wiseman, Michelle https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/datasets/wp988p790 unknown The results of the study were published in 2012 (North American Fungi 7: 1-25): 0 https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/datasets/wp988p790 Copyright Not Evaluated ecology Cladonia Cladina secondary chemistry rare species systematics ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:03Z Isolated populations of four reindeer lichen species and varieties co-occur in a unique relict prairie habitat at Mima Mounds Natural Area Preserve, southwest Washington State, USA. The prairie is the type locality for mima mounds, unusual geologic features providing topographical variation that influences vegetation patterns. Reindeer lichens (Cladonia subgenus Cladina) are very rare in inland valley habitats of the western states outside of Alaska; one study species, C. ciliata, is apparently rare in North America and is not known south of the site. The current study establishes distributional, ecological, chemotypic, and phylogenetic analyses for the study species. We found that topography was not as important as recent fire history in explaining reindeer lichen distribution; in the future, prescribed fire is likely to benefit reindeer lichens so long as it preserves pockets of refugia as propagule sources. We also detected moderate air pollution stress, which is projected to have impacts on lichen abundances and community compositions in the near future. Chemotype analysis revealed 6 reindeer lichen chemotypes, of which 2 are rare (C. ciliata var. tenuis and C. portentosa subsp. pacifica f. decolorans). Phylogenetic analyses supported previous species concepts, showing C. portentosa is distinct from the closely-related group that includes C. rangiferina and two varieties of C. ciliata. We suggested that the four target taxa described herein may benefit from continued future monitoring and cataloging as state sensitive species. Other/Unknown Material Reindeer lichen Alaska ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) |
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Open Polar |
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ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) |
op_collection_id |
ftoregonstate |
language |
unknown |
topic |
ecology Cladonia Cladina secondary chemistry rare species systematics |
spellingShingle |
ecology Cladonia Cladina secondary chemistry rare species systematics McCune, Bruce Smith, Robert Alphandary, Elisa Arvidson, Rheannon Bono, Gina Chipman, Bridget Corkery, Andrew DiMeglio, Joseph Hansen, Kimberly Isch, Katrina McAlpine, Jesse Marks-Fife, Chad Mead, Brad Miller, Daniel Nolte, Nathan Ottombrino, Ashley Prior, Tamra Streich, Jared Theis, Susan Vandruff, Stephanie Wesseler, Christina Wesseler, Kimberly Wiseman, Michelle GISlayersMima2011.zip |
topic_facet |
ecology Cladonia Cladina secondary chemistry rare species systematics |
description |
Isolated populations of four reindeer lichen species and varieties co-occur in a unique relict prairie habitat at Mima Mounds Natural Area Preserve, southwest Washington State, USA. The prairie is the type locality for mima mounds, unusual geologic features providing topographical variation that influences vegetation patterns. Reindeer lichens (Cladonia subgenus Cladina) are very rare in inland valley habitats of the western states outside of Alaska; one study species, C. ciliata, is apparently rare in North America and is not known south of the site. The current study establishes distributional, ecological, chemotypic, and phylogenetic analyses for the study species. We found that topography was not as important as recent fire history in explaining reindeer lichen distribution; in the future, prescribed fire is likely to benefit reindeer lichens so long as it preserves pockets of refugia as propagule sources. We also detected moderate air pollution stress, which is projected to have impacts on lichen abundances and community compositions in the near future. Chemotype analysis revealed 6 reindeer lichen chemotypes, of which 2 are rare (C. ciliata var. tenuis and C. portentosa subsp. pacifica f. decolorans). Phylogenetic analyses supported previous species concepts, showing C. portentosa is distinct from the closely-related group that includes C. rangiferina and two varieties of C. ciliata. We suggested that the four target taxa described herein may benefit from continued future monitoring and cataloging as state sensitive species. |
author |
McCune, Bruce Smith, Robert Alphandary, Elisa Arvidson, Rheannon Bono, Gina Chipman, Bridget Corkery, Andrew DiMeglio, Joseph Hansen, Kimberly Isch, Katrina McAlpine, Jesse Marks-Fife, Chad Mead, Brad Miller, Daniel Nolte, Nathan Ottombrino, Ashley Prior, Tamra Streich, Jared Theis, Susan Vandruff, Stephanie Wesseler, Christina Wesseler, Kimberly Wiseman, Michelle |
author_facet |
McCune, Bruce Smith, Robert Alphandary, Elisa Arvidson, Rheannon Bono, Gina Chipman, Bridget Corkery, Andrew DiMeglio, Joseph Hansen, Kimberly Isch, Katrina McAlpine, Jesse Marks-Fife, Chad Mead, Brad Miller, Daniel Nolte, Nathan Ottombrino, Ashley Prior, Tamra Streich, Jared Theis, Susan Vandruff, Stephanie Wesseler, Christina Wesseler, Kimberly Wiseman, Michelle |
author_sort |
McCune, Bruce |
title |
GISlayersMima2011.zip |
title_short |
GISlayersMima2011.zip |
title_full |
GISlayersMima2011.zip |
title_fullStr |
GISlayersMima2011.zip |
title_full_unstemmed |
GISlayersMima2011.zip |
title_sort |
gislayersmima2011.zip |
url |
https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/datasets/wp988p790 |
genre |
Reindeer lichen Alaska |
genre_facet |
Reindeer lichen Alaska |
op_relation |
The results of the study were published in 2012 (North American Fungi 7: 1-25): 0 https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/datasets/wp988p790 |
op_rights |
Copyright Not Evaluated |
_version_ |
1810473995544297472 |