The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska

This investigation presents a bryo-geographical study of the Alexander Archipelago and the adjacent mainland of southeastern Alaska. A flora containing the 572 taxa of hryophytes now known from southeastern Alaska (67.5 percent of the known Alaskan bryoflora) has been compiled from published records...

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Main Author: Worley, Ian Almer
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 1972
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33033
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institution Open Polar
collection University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
op_collection_id ftunivbritcolcir
language English
description This investigation presents a bryo-geographical study of the Alexander Archipelago and the adjacent mainland of southeastern Alaska. A flora containing the 572 taxa of hryophytes now known from southeastern Alaska (67.5 percent of the known Alaskan bryoflora) has been compiled from published records and 10,901 collections made by the author. These specimens were obtained from 130 sites during an accumulated field time of 40 weeks from 1966 through 1969. There are included 38 taxa new to the state and 94 which are new to southeastern Alaska. The local distribution of each taxon has been cited fully either within the text or as a distribution map. Habitat, biological, taxonomic, and distributional information are given for each entry. The most significant components of the flora are treated within 27 geographical elements. There are probably no bryophytes endemic to southeastern Alaska. Of the total bryoflora, taxa with widespread distributions comprise ca. 74 percent, northern Pacific Basin taxa constitute ca. 16.8 percent (over one half of these are western North American endemics), ca. 5.4 percent of the flora belongs to the western North American - western Eurasian disjunction, and ca. 3.8 percent of the total displays less distinct or individual distribution patterns. The regional flora is not particularly distinctive, is com posed primarily of broad endemics or plants of widespread ranges, and is a portion of the cool-temperate, oceanic geographical zone that extends from the northern Gulf of Alaska to Vancouver Island. Southeastern Alaska lies within the northern portions of the principal zone of western North American endemism. The bulk of the flora is of temperate, cool temperate, and boreal origins with exceedingly few taxa having tropical, subtrop-cial, or arctic affinities. It has been derived primarily from a widespread Arcto-Tertiary flora which has been dissected and has re-expanded with the fluctuating events of the Pleistocene. Taxa of the North Pacific Arc represent a diversity of distributional patterns which tends to favor a recent history of post-Pleistocene expansion from local rather than from trans-Pacific sources. Several taxa, primarily hepatics of hyperbeeanic habitats, display disjunct ranges wherein certain local populations are postulated to be essentially relict. Local refugia of undetermined age exist on the elevated marine terraces northward from Icy Point to the vicinity of Yakutat Bay. Mountain nunataks were not probable as important refugia during maximum glaciations, but seaward headlands of the outer islands, strandflats, and exposed portions of the continental shelf also may have served as refugia and supported diverse communities. A zone of significantly wetter climate extends along the outermost coast and adjacent to the Dixon Entrance. Over three percent of the local flora (mostly hepatics) are restricted to the zone and are diagnostic of that environment. Areas of drier climate occur within rainshadow zones of the archipelago, along the continental Boundary Ranges, and in the upper Lynn Canal complex. The last region may he especially sensitive to climatic change and an immigration route between the oceanic and continental floristic areas. Relict populations of bryophytes (primarily mosses) from Hypsithermal time persist in specialized habitats in the archipelago within the drier zone. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate
format Thesis
author Worley, Ian Almer
spellingShingle Worley, Ian Almer
The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
author_facet Worley, Ian Almer
author_sort Worley, Ian Almer
title The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
title_short The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
title_full The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
title_fullStr The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
title_full_unstemmed The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska
title_sort bryo-geography of southeastern alaska
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 1972
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33033
long_lat ENVELOPE(-132.003,-132.003,54.416,54.416)
ENVELOPE(-128.242,-128.242,53.469,53.469)
geographic Arctic
Dixon Entrance
Gulf of Alaska
Icy Point
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Dixon Entrance
Gulf of Alaska
Icy Point
Pacific
genre Archipelago
Arctic
Yakutat
Alaska
genre_facet Archipelago
Arctic
Yakutat
Alaska
op_rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/33033 2023-05-15T14:17:57+02:00 The bryo-geography of southeastern Alaska Worley, Ian Almer 1972 http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33033 eng eng University of British Columbia For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Text Thesis/Dissertation 1972 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T18:02:59Z This investigation presents a bryo-geographical study of the Alexander Archipelago and the adjacent mainland of southeastern Alaska. A flora containing the 572 taxa of hryophytes now known from southeastern Alaska (67.5 percent of the known Alaskan bryoflora) has been compiled from published records and 10,901 collections made by the author. These specimens were obtained from 130 sites during an accumulated field time of 40 weeks from 1966 through 1969. There are included 38 taxa new to the state and 94 which are new to southeastern Alaska. The local distribution of each taxon has been cited fully either within the text or as a distribution map. Habitat, biological, taxonomic, and distributional information are given for each entry. The most significant components of the flora are treated within 27 geographical elements. There are probably no bryophytes endemic to southeastern Alaska. Of the total bryoflora, taxa with widespread distributions comprise ca. 74 percent, northern Pacific Basin taxa constitute ca. 16.8 percent (over one half of these are western North American endemics), ca. 5.4 percent of the flora belongs to the western North American - western Eurasian disjunction, and ca. 3.8 percent of the total displays less distinct or individual distribution patterns. The regional flora is not particularly distinctive, is com posed primarily of broad endemics or plants of widespread ranges, and is a portion of the cool-temperate, oceanic geographical zone that extends from the northern Gulf of Alaska to Vancouver Island. Southeastern Alaska lies within the northern portions of the principal zone of western North American endemism. The bulk of the flora is of temperate, cool temperate, and boreal origins with exceedingly few taxa having tropical, subtrop-cial, or arctic affinities. It has been derived primarily from a widespread Arcto-Tertiary flora which has been dissected and has re-expanded with the fluctuating events of the Pleistocene. Taxa of the North Pacific Arc represent a diversity of distributional patterns which tends to favor a recent history of post-Pleistocene expansion from local rather than from trans-Pacific sources. Several taxa, primarily hepatics of hyperbeeanic habitats, display disjunct ranges wherein certain local populations are postulated to be essentially relict. Local refugia of undetermined age exist on the elevated marine terraces northward from Icy Point to the vicinity of Yakutat Bay. Mountain nunataks were not probable as important refugia during maximum glaciations, but seaward headlands of the outer islands, strandflats, and exposed portions of the continental shelf also may have served as refugia and supported diverse communities. A zone of significantly wetter climate extends along the outermost coast and adjacent to the Dixon Entrance. Over three percent of the local flora (mostly hepatics) are restricted to the zone and are diagnostic of that environment. Areas of drier climate occur within rainshadow zones of the archipelago, along the continental Boundary Ranges, and in the upper Lynn Canal complex. The last region may he especially sensitive to climatic change and an immigration route between the oceanic and continental floristic areas. Relict populations of bryophytes (primarily mosses) from Hypsithermal time persist in specialized habitats in the archipelago within the drier zone. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate Thesis Archipelago Arctic Yakutat Alaska University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository Arctic Dixon Entrance ENVELOPE(-132.003,-132.003,54.416,54.416) Gulf of Alaska Icy Point ENVELOPE(-128.242,-128.242,53.469,53.469) Pacific