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records 12681 through 12690 of 38961

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Add/Drop Name Reference Plots Description
Comm #12681
 
CEGL006345
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accession code: VB.CC.6842.CEGL006345 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12682
 
A.1774
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accession code: VB.CC.1509.A1774 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12683
 
A.1775
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accession code: VB.CC.1510.A1775 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12684
 
CEGL003833
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accession code: VB.CC.5673.CEGL003833 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12685
 
CEGL003835
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accession code: VB.CC.5674.CEGL003835 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12686
 
CEGL000378
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accession code: VB.CC.2997.CEGL000378
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12687
 
CEGL004550
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accession code: VB.CC.6092.CEGL004550 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #12688
 
Pinus echinata - Quercus (marilandica, stellata) / Schizachyrium scoparium - Silphium terebinthinaceum - Oligoneuron album Woodland
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accession code: VB.CC.34955.CEGL003868
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro...  0 This mixed evergreen - deciduous sparse forest association consists of prairie-like woodlands occurring over stiff calcareous clay soils derived from weathered shale and limestone of the Conasauga Group. It ranges along the Coosa River Valley in northwestern Georgia and into northeastern Alabama. Pristine examples are difficult to locate, as much of the habitat for this association has been converted to agriculture or silviculture, and many remaining examples include a significant component of <i>Pinus taeda</i>. Most surviving stands occur as woodland vegetation surrounding small prairie-like openings containing disjunct Midwestern grassland species and narrow endemics such as <i>Marshallia mohrii</i> and <i>Helianthus x verticillatus</i> [see ~<i>Schizachyrium scoparium - Andropogon gerardii - Silphium terebinthinaceum</i> Coosa Valley Barren Herbaceous Vegetation (CEGL004757)$$ and ~<i>Andropogon gerardii - Bouteloua curtipendula - Echinacea simulata</i> Coosa Valley Barren Herbaceous Vegetation (CEGL004045)$$ in reference to closely related herbaceous-dominated prairie openings]. The canopy is open and includes nearly an even mixture of <i>Pinus echinata</i> and <i>Pinus taeda</i> with <i>Quercus marilandica</i> and <i>Quercus stellata</i> comprising the sparse subcanopy and understory. Examples in the southern portion of the range in Alabama may include <i>Pinus palustris</i> as a minor component of the canopy. Some examples include <i>Quercus phellos</i> and <i>Quercus alba</i>. The shrub layer tends to also be minimally developed with <i>Crataegus spathulata, Crataegus marshallii, Vaccinium arboreum, Diospyros virginiana</i>, and <i>Vaccinium stamineum</i> as typical components. The herbaceous layer is well-developed with prairie-affiliated grasses such as <i>Andropogon gerardii, Schizachyrium scoparium</i>, and <i>Sorghastrum nutans</i> as dominants. <i>Panicum virgatum, Gymnopogon ambiguus</i>, and <i>Sporobolus clandestinus</i> are also important grass species found within these woodlands. A wide variety of forbs, many of these either disjunct or prairie species near their southeastern limit, are codominant in the herbaceous layer. Examples of such species include <i>Oligoneuron album, Oligoneuron rigidum, Silphium terebinthinaceum, Helianthus mollis, Symphyotrichum pratense (= Aster sericeus var. microphyllus)</i>, and <i>Silphium radula</i>. 
Comm #12689
 
Hypericum fasciculatum / Rhynchospora (chapmanii, harperi) Shrubland
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accession code: VB.CC.35934.CEGL003869
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro...  0 Wet prairies and depressional wetlands dominated by the needle-leaved <i>Hypericum fasciculatum</i>. <i>Rhynchospora chapmanii</i> and <i>Rhynchospora harperi</i> are frequent associates. Other species present in southern Florida examples (Okeechobee County) include <i>Proserpinaca pectinata, Gratiola</i> sp., <i>Pluchea</i> sp., <i>Rhynchospora inundata, Rhynchospora</i> spp., <i>Lachnanthes caroliana</i>, and <i>Oxypolis filiformis</i>. 
Comm #12690
 
Nuphar lutea ssp. ulvacea Herbaceous Vegetation
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accession code: VB.CC.19282.NUPHARLUTEASSPU
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro...  0 This association consists of monospecific beds of Nuphar lutea ssp. ulvacea found along blackwater streams fed by spring runs in the Florida Panhandle west of the Apalachicola River, presumably extending west into Alabama and perhaps Mississippi. 

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records 12681 through 12690 of 38961

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