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Name
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Reference
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Plots↓
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Description |
Comm #12661
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Quercus palustris - Carya illinoinensis / Ilex decidua Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.35632.CEGL004797
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Southeastern Ecology Working Gro... |
0
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This association is described from the Verdigris and Neosho rivers in northeastern Oklahoma, where it occurs on moist to wet soils of bottomlands and floodplains. The canopy is characteristically dominated by <i>Quercus palustris</i> and <i>Carya illinoinensis</i>. A characteristic species of the subcanopy or tall-shrub layer is <i>Ilex decidua</i>. Other characteristic species include <i>Ampelopsis cordata, Celtis laevigata, Cinna arundinacea, Crataegus viridis, Gleditsia triacanthos, Morus rubra, Packera glabella (= Senecio glabellus)</i>, and <i>Ulmus rubra</i>. |
Comm #12662
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VII.C.5.N » more details
accession code: VB.CC.343.VIIC5N
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EcoArt 2002 |
0
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Comm #12663
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Picea pungens / Carex siccata Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.26864.PICEAPUNGENSCAR
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Western Ecology Working Group of... |
0
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Comm #12664
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Hordeum jubatum Great Basin Herbaceous Vegetation » more details
accession code: VB.CC.31644.CEGL005285
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Western Ecology Working Group of... |
0
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This foxtail barley community type is found in the mountains and basins of the western United States and Canada north into the Boreal Plains of Alberta, in intermountain parks in Colorado and northeastern Utah and may occur elsewhere in the interior western U.S. Stands are found in lowlands with moderately to strongly saline or alkaline soils. The topography is flat, and the soils are often flooded or saturated in the spring. The vegetation is dominated by short and medium tall graminoids with a total vegetation cover of nearly 100%. Shrubs are usually absent. <i>Hordeum jubatum</i> dominates the community. Other common species in this community are <i>Elymus trachycaulus, Distichlis spicata, Pascopyrum smithii, Poa arida, Poa compressa</i>, and <i>Rumex crispus</i>. |
Comm #12665
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CEGL002742 » more details
accession code: VB.CC.5130.CEGL002742
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
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EcoArt 2002 |
0
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Comm #12666
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CEGL002194 » more details
accession code: VB.CC.4716.CEGL002194
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
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EcoArt 2002 |
0
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Comm #12667
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Pseudotsuga menziesii - Tsuga heterophylla / Vaccinium ovatum Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.32746.CEGL002614
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Western Ecology Working Group of... |
0
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This association occurs below about 300 m (1000 feet) elevation in central portions of the Puget Lowland of Washington, and in portions of the Gulf Islands, British Columbia. This is an evergreen needle-leaved forest typically dominated by <i>Pseudotsuga menziesii</i> and <i>Tsuga heterophylla</i>, the former usually taller and more abundant, the latter usually dominating tree regeneration. <i>Thuja plicata</i> is usually present and occasionally codominant; <i>Pinus monticola</i> is present in about half the plots, and <i>Pinus contorta</i> is occasionally prominent in young stands. The well-developed 0.8- to 2.0-m tall understory is dominated by the evergreen broad-leaved shrubs <i>Vaccinium ovatum</i> and <i>Gaultheria shallon</i>. Other frequent species are <i>Pteridium aquilinum, Mahonia nervosa</i>, and <i>Vaccinium parvifolium</i>. Herbaceous species are typically found in very small amounts. This association typically occurs on slightly dry to mesic, nutrient-poor sites, mainly on gravelly glacial till. This association is distinguished from similar ones by >10% cover of <i>Tsuga heterophylla</i> or <i>Thuja plicata</i>, and >5% cover of <i>Vaccinium ovatum</i>, combined with <5% cover of <i>Rhododendron macrophyllum</i> and <3% cover of <i>Polystichum munitum</i>. |
Comm #12668
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CEGL002568 » more details
accession code: VB.CC.4982.CEGL002568
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
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EcoArt 2002 |
0
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Comm #12669
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CEGL000763 » more details
accession code: VB.CC.3367.CEGL000763
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
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EcoArt 2002 |
0
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Comm #12670
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Alnus spp. Avalanche Chute Shrubland » more details
accession code: VB.CC.22084.ALNUSSPPAVALANC
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Western Ecology Working Group of... |
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