Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia

Large-scale industrial development in northwest Siberia is resulting in extensive disturbance in a region of low arctic tundra with few data on vegetation responses to such change. Groups of plant species are described for a variety of human-induced surfaces four years after their creation, as well...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Forbes, B.C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/6b45d157-5a6e-4f8d-aa2e-0010f45d1d66
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author Forbes, B.C.
author_facet Forbes, B.C.
author_sort Forbes, B.C.
collection LaCRIS - University of Lapland Current Research System
description Large-scale industrial development in northwest Siberia is resulting in extensive disturbance in a region of low arctic tundra with few data on vegetation responses to such change. Groups of plant species are described for a variety of human-induced surfaces four years after their creation, as well as in adjoining control areas. Ordination and floristic classification reveal active roadsides to be similar to abandoned lowland sand quarries. Constrained ordination indicates a gradient of soil pH, with values being highest in sand quarries and on roadsides. Rorippa palustris and Polygonum humifusum, ruderal species with a pronounced southerly range were among the dominant plants along roadsides and in lowland sand quarries. These are presumed to have migrated north along the road corridor. Floristics in upland primary seres reflected well their proximal natural communities, with 50-90% of the observed colonists present in the adjoining tundra. This was not the case in lowland seres, where colonists originating from the undisturbed vegetation were virtually absent.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
Polar Geography
Tundra
Yamal Peninsula
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
Polar Geography
Tundra
Yamal Peninsula
Siberia
geographic Arctic
Yamal Peninsula
geographic_facet Arctic
Yamal Peninsula
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(69.873,69.873,70.816,70.816)
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op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_source Forbes , B C 1997 , ' Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia ' , Polar Geography , vol. 21 , no. 2 , pp. 79-100 .
publishDate 1997
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spelling ftulaplandcdispu:oai:lacris.ulapland.fi:publications/6b45d157-5a6e-4f8d-aa2e-0010f45d1d66 2025-06-08T13:59:37+00:00 Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia Forbes, B.C. 1997 https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/6b45d157-5a6e-4f8d-aa2e-0010f45d1d66 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Forbes , B C 1997 , ' Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia ' , Polar Geography , vol. 21 , no. 2 , pp. 79-100 . /dk/atira/pure/person/fieldofscience2010/1/17/2 name=Environmental sciences article 1997 ftulaplandcdispu 2025-05-13T03:19:15Z Large-scale industrial development in northwest Siberia is resulting in extensive disturbance in a region of low arctic tundra with few data on vegetation responses to such change. Groups of plant species are described for a variety of human-induced surfaces four years after their creation, as well as in adjoining control areas. Ordination and floristic classification reveal active roadsides to be similar to abandoned lowland sand quarries. Constrained ordination indicates a gradient of soil pH, with values being highest in sand quarries and on roadsides. Rorippa palustris and Polygonum humifusum, ruderal species with a pronounced southerly range were among the dominant plants along roadsides and in lowland sand quarries. These are presumed to have migrated north along the road corridor. Floristics in upland primary seres reflected well their proximal natural communities, with 50-90% of the observed colonists present in the adjoining tundra. This was not the case in lowland seres, where colonists originating from the undisturbed vegetation were virtually absent. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Polar Geography Tundra Yamal Peninsula Siberia LaCRIS - University of Lapland Current Research System Arctic Yamal Peninsula ENVELOPE(69.873,69.873,70.816,70.816)
spellingShingle /dk/atira/pure/person/fieldofscience2010/1/17/2
name=Environmental sciences
Forbes, B.C.
Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title_full Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title_fullStr Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title_full_unstemmed Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title_short Tundra disturbance studies IV. Species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, Yamal Peninsula, northwest Siberia, Russia
title_sort tundra disturbance studies iv. species establishment on anthropogenic primary surfaces, yamal peninsula, northwest siberia, russia
topic /dk/atira/pure/person/fieldofscience2010/1/17/2
name=Environmental sciences
topic_facet /dk/atira/pure/person/fieldofscience2010/1/17/2
name=Environmental sciences
url https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/6b45d157-5a6e-4f8d-aa2e-0010f45d1d66