Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective

This thesis is a study of the mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands based on five altitudinal transects sampled during the period 1999-2001. The vegetation was studied on the basis of plant communities, life-forms and biodiversity of vascular plant species and is discussed in a climate change per...

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Main Author: Fosaa, Anna Maria
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Anna Maria Fosaa, Faroese Museum of Natural History,, V. U. Hammershaimbsgøta 13, FO-100 Tórshavn, Faroe Islands 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/466405
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spelling ftulundlup:oai:lup.lub.lu.se:d0484e15-8239-46cb-8517-457940593610 2023-06-11T04:09:58+02:00 Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective Fosaa, Anna Maria 2003 https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/466405 eng eng Anna Maria Fosaa, Faroese Museum of Natural History,, V. U. Hammershaimbsgøta 13, FO-100 Tórshavn, Faroe Islands https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/466405 urn:isbn:91-628-5866-1 Ecology klimatologi marklära Växtekologi Fysisk geografi climatology cartography pedology geomorphology climate change Physical geography Raunkiær´s life-forms biodiversity Vegetation zones plant communities Plant ecology kartografi geomorfologi thesis/doccomp info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis text 2003 ftulundlup 2023-05-10T22:27:49Z This thesis is a study of the mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands based on five altitudinal transects sampled during the period 1999-2001. The vegetation was studied on the basis of plant communities, life-forms and biodiversity of vascular plant species and is discussed in a climate change perspective. The boundary between arctic and temperate vegetation is established and the tolerance of character species was tested according to different temperature parameters. The aim has been to assess how the vegetation might be affected by climate change. Three significantly different altitudinal vegetation zones were defined, a temperate zone (upper limit at 200 m a.s.l.), a low alpine zone (200-400 m a.s.l.) and an alpine zone (above 400 m a.s.l). The shift in vegetation zones is also seen in the change of biodiversity of vascular plant species where two maxima in biodiversity are found, one at 250 m a.s.l, the other at 500 m a.s.l. These maxima might indicate transition areas between the zones, more or less overlaps with the low alpine vegetation zone. The study on Raunkiær’s life-forms also showed that the ratio between hemicryptophytes/chamaephytes was at its maximum in this zone. In earlier studies, the boundary between the low alpine and the alpine zone is found at a higher altitude. This could indicate that a lowering in the alpine zone has occurred within the last fifty years as a result of a cooling by about 0.25°C. The responses of changing summer and winter (soil) temperature on twelve plant species, in a cooling or warming scenario, shows that the species most threatened by a warming scenario are those that are found with a limited distribution restricted to the uppermost parts of the mountains, especially Salix herbacea, Racomitrium fasciculare , and Bistorta vivipara . For species found at lower altitudes, the effect will mainly be a general upward migration. The most sensitive species are those with a low tolerance, especially Calluna vulgaris , and also Empetrum nigrum , and Nardus stricta . If the ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Climate change Empetrum nigrum Faroe Islands Salix herbacea Lund University Publications (LUP) Arctic Faroe Islands
institution Open Polar
collection Lund University Publications (LUP)
op_collection_id ftulundlup
language English
topic Ecology
klimatologi
marklära
Växtekologi
Fysisk geografi
climatology
cartography
pedology
geomorphology
climate change
Physical geography
Raunkiær´s life-forms
biodiversity
Vegetation zones
plant communities
Plant ecology
kartografi
geomorfologi
spellingShingle Ecology
klimatologi
marklära
Växtekologi
Fysisk geografi
climatology
cartography
pedology
geomorphology
climate change
Physical geography
Raunkiær´s life-forms
biodiversity
Vegetation zones
plant communities
Plant ecology
kartografi
geomorfologi
Fosaa, Anna Maria
Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
topic_facet Ecology
klimatologi
marklära
Växtekologi
Fysisk geografi
climatology
cartography
pedology
geomorphology
climate change
Physical geography
Raunkiær´s life-forms
biodiversity
Vegetation zones
plant communities
Plant ecology
kartografi
geomorfologi
description This thesis is a study of the mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands based on five altitudinal transects sampled during the period 1999-2001. The vegetation was studied on the basis of plant communities, life-forms and biodiversity of vascular plant species and is discussed in a climate change perspective. The boundary between arctic and temperate vegetation is established and the tolerance of character species was tested according to different temperature parameters. The aim has been to assess how the vegetation might be affected by climate change. Three significantly different altitudinal vegetation zones were defined, a temperate zone (upper limit at 200 m a.s.l.), a low alpine zone (200-400 m a.s.l.) and an alpine zone (above 400 m a.s.l). The shift in vegetation zones is also seen in the change of biodiversity of vascular plant species where two maxima in biodiversity are found, one at 250 m a.s.l, the other at 500 m a.s.l. These maxima might indicate transition areas between the zones, more or less overlaps with the low alpine vegetation zone. The study on Raunkiær’s life-forms also showed that the ratio between hemicryptophytes/chamaephytes was at its maximum in this zone. In earlier studies, the boundary between the low alpine and the alpine zone is found at a higher altitude. This could indicate that a lowering in the alpine zone has occurred within the last fifty years as a result of a cooling by about 0.25°C. The responses of changing summer and winter (soil) temperature on twelve plant species, in a cooling or warming scenario, shows that the species most threatened by a warming scenario are those that are found with a limited distribution restricted to the uppermost parts of the mountains, especially Salix herbacea, Racomitrium fasciculare , and Bistorta vivipara . For species found at lower altitudes, the effect will mainly be a general upward migration. The most sensitive species are those with a low tolerance, especially Calluna vulgaris , and also Empetrum nigrum , and Nardus stricta . If the ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Fosaa, Anna Maria
author_facet Fosaa, Anna Maria
author_sort Fosaa, Anna Maria
title Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
title_short Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
title_full Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
title_fullStr Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
title_full_unstemmed Mountain vegetation in the Faroe Islands in a climate change perspective
title_sort mountain vegetation in the faroe islands in a climate change perspective
publisher Anna Maria Fosaa, Faroese Museum of Natural History,, V. U. Hammershaimbsgøta 13, FO-100 Tórshavn, Faroe Islands
publishDate 2003
url https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/466405
geographic Arctic
Faroe Islands
geographic_facet Arctic
Faroe Islands
genre Arctic
Climate change
Empetrum nigrum
Faroe Islands
Salix herbacea
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Empetrum nigrum
Faroe Islands
Salix herbacea
op_relation https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/466405
urn:isbn:91-628-5866-1
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