Login | Datasets | Logout
 

View Community Concepts - Detail

A.287 | EcoArt 2002
  click to update datacart
Name: A.287
Reference: EcoArt 2002
Description: This alliance includes a variety of bottomland communities of moderately wet floodplains of the lower Piedmont, Interior Low Plateau, Coastal Plain, and possibly the Cumberland Plateau, ranging into the Ouachita Mountains and Ozarks, and dominated by ~Liquidambar styraciflua$ with or without some combination of ~Liriodendron tulipifera$ and ~Acer rubrum$ as codominants. Canopy and subcanopy associates vary with geography and substrate, but may include ~Acer barbatum, Ilex opaca var. opaca, Aesculus sylvatica, Quercus nigra, Carya cordiformis, Platanus occidentalis, Betula nigra, Carpinus caroliniana ssp. caroliniana, Cornus florida, Crataegus flava, Fagus grandifolia, Juglans nigra, Morus rubra var. rubra, Ostrya virginiana var. virginiana, Oxydendrum arboreum, Pinus echinata, Prunus serotina var. serotina, Quercus alba, Quercus rubra var. rubra, Ulmus rubra, Ulmus americana, Ulmus alata, Juniperus virginiana var. virginiana, Nyssa sylvatica, Fraxinus americana$, and ~Fraxinus pennsylvanica$. The shrub layer often is well-developed and species include ~Euonymus americana, Lindera benzoin var. benzoin, Corylus americana, Viburnum acerifolium, Viburnum nudum var. nudum, Viburnum prunifolium, Viburnum rufidulum, Hamamelis virginiana, Asimina triloba$, and ~Ilex decidua$ among others. Vines are prominent and species include ~Vitis rotundifolia, Apios americana, Campsis radicans, Aristolochia serpentaria, Bignonia capreolata, Dioscorea quaternata, Gelsemium sempervirens, Parthenocissus quinquefolia (= var. quinquefolia), Campsis radicans, Passiflora lutea, Smilax bona-nox, Smilax glauca (= var. glauca), Smilax hugeri, Smilax rotundifolia$, and ~Toxicodendron radicans ssp. radicans$. The herbaceous layer can be species-rich and often has good sedge development. Common species in this layer include ~Thalictrum thalictroides, Trillium cuneatum, Arisaema triphyllum ssp. triphyllum, Asplenium platyneuron var. platyneuron, Botrychium virginianum, Carex$ spp., ~Carex impressinervia, Carex striatula, Galium circaezans, Geum canadense, Polystichum acrostichoides$, and ~Scutellaria integrifolia$ among many others. Soils are relatively acid. The exotics ~Microstegium vimineum, Ligustrum sinense$, and ~Lonicera japonica$ may be common in examples of this alliance. This alliance is fairly common in the lower Piedmont of Georgia, as well as on small stream floodplains and bottoms in all of the Interior Low Plateau of Kentucky (except the Bluegrass region) where it is somewhat successional. ~Liriodendron tulipifera$ is dominant on disturbed areas of Kentucky and is common on well-drained floodplains of Kentucky without ~Liquidambar styraciflua$. Conversely, ~Liriodendron tulipifera$ is absent in Ouachita - Ozark examples. 
Accession Code: VB.CC.1893.A287
Plot-observations of this Community Concept: 0
      Party Perspective according to: NatureServe (organization)
Perspective from: 26-Nov-1997 to: 17-Mar-2005
     
  • status: accepted
  • Community's Parent: I.B.2.N.d
  • This Community's Level: Alliance
  • This Community's Children: [none]
Names:   Code: A.287
  Scientific: LIQUIDAMBAR STYRACIFLUA - (LIRIODENDRON TULIPIFERA, ACER RUBRUM) TEMPORARILY FLOODED FOREST ALLIANCE
  Common: Sweetgum - (Tuliptree, Red Maple) Temporarily Flooded Forest Alliance
(convergence) and Synonyms:
(undetermined) Liquidambar styraciflua - (Liriodendron tulipifera, Acer rubrum) Temporarily Flooded Forest Alliance