Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska

The hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska was compiled from over 4000 collections including historical collections in The University of Tennessee Herbarium and more recent, personal collections made during 1988 and 1990. Literature reports were also incorporated. A total of 135 species in 52...

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Main Author: Davison, Paul Gregory
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/10662
https://trace.tennessee.edu/context/utk_graddiss/article/12089/viewcontent/Thesis93b.D298.pdf
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spelling ftunivtennknox:oai:trace.tennessee.edu:utk_graddiss-12089 2024-10-06T13:53:24+00:00 Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska Davison, Paul Gregory 1993-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/10662 https://trace.tennessee.edu/context/utk_graddiss/article/12089/viewcontent/Thesis93b.D298.pdf unknown TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/10662 https://trace.tennessee.edu/context/utk_graddiss/article/12089/viewcontent/Thesis93b.D298.pdf Doctoral Dissertations text 1993 ftunivtennknox 2024-09-24T23:52:01Z The hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska was compiled from over 4000 collections including historical collections in The University of Tennessee Herbarium and more recent, personal collections made during 1988 and 1990. Literature reports were also incorporated. A total of 135 species in 52 genera and 29 families are treated. Ten species are excluded. Taxonomic discussions include differentiation from related taxa and descriptions of deviant or noteworthy morphological forms (including the presence of reproductive material). Ecological and phytogeographical information accompany taxonomic discussions. Two species, putatively new to science, are described in detail and one species, Chiloscyphus gemmiparous Evans, is shown to have questionable generic placement. Thirty-nine species, including 14 new to Alaska and 9 new to North America, are added to the Aleutian flora. Aleutian distribution maps are provided for all species and world distribution maps for 18 species. An analysis of the worldwide distributions reveals the following percentages of species in 5 categories: 2.2% Cosmopolitan, 79.3% Circumboreal, 11.9% North Pacific Arc, 5.2% Western North American, and 1.5% Endemic. The large Circumboreal category is further divided into Widespread Circumboreal Species (53.3%) and Imperfectly Circumboreal Species (25.9%). The majority of the flora is derived from Circumboreal elements. Most of the Asiatic species are found on both sides of the Pacific (North Pacific element). It is concluded that the majority, if not all, of the hepatic flora postdates the last glacial maximum. Text Alaska Aleutian Islands University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Trace Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Trace
op_collection_id ftunivtennknox
language unknown
description The hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska was compiled from over 4000 collections including historical collections in The University of Tennessee Herbarium and more recent, personal collections made during 1988 and 1990. Literature reports were also incorporated. A total of 135 species in 52 genera and 29 families are treated. Ten species are excluded. Taxonomic discussions include differentiation from related taxa and descriptions of deviant or noteworthy morphological forms (including the presence of reproductive material). Ecological and phytogeographical information accompany taxonomic discussions. Two species, putatively new to science, are described in detail and one species, Chiloscyphus gemmiparous Evans, is shown to have questionable generic placement. Thirty-nine species, including 14 new to Alaska and 9 new to North America, are added to the Aleutian flora. Aleutian distribution maps are provided for all species and world distribution maps for 18 species. An analysis of the worldwide distributions reveals the following percentages of species in 5 categories: 2.2% Cosmopolitan, 79.3% Circumboreal, 11.9% North Pacific Arc, 5.2% Western North American, and 1.5% Endemic. The large Circumboreal category is further divided into Widespread Circumboreal Species (53.3%) and Imperfectly Circumboreal Species (25.9%). The majority of the flora is derived from Circumboreal elements. Most of the Asiatic species are found on both sides of the Pacific (North Pacific element). It is concluded that the majority, if not all, of the hepatic flora postdates the last glacial maximum.
format Text
author Davison, Paul Gregory
spellingShingle Davison, Paul Gregory
Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
author_facet Davison, Paul Gregory
author_sort Davison, Paul Gregory
title Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
title_short Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
title_full Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
title_fullStr Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska
title_sort floristic and phytogeographic studies of the hepatic flora of the aleutian islands, alaska
publisher TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 1993
url https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/10662
https://trace.tennessee.edu/context/utk_graddiss/article/12089/viewcontent/Thesis93b.D298.pdf
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_source Doctoral Dissertations
op_relation https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/10662
https://trace.tennessee.edu/context/utk_graddiss/article/12089/viewcontent/Thesis93b.D298.pdf
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