Login | Datasets | Logout
 

View Community Concepts - Summary

««more pages

«previous  | 1311 | 1312 | 1313 | 1314 | 1315 | 1316 | 1317 | 1318 | page 1319 | 1320 |  next»
records 13181 through 13190 of 38961

more pages»»

add all query results to datacart,   add plots on page to datacart,   drop plots on page from datacart

Add/Drop Name Reference Plots Description
Comm #13181
 
CEGL001270
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.3856.CEGL001270 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #13182
 
CEGL001271
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.3857.CEGL001271 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #13183
 
CEGL001272
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.3858.CEGL001272 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #13184
 
Baccharis pilularis / Danthonia californica Shrubland
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.19564.BACCHARISPILULA
Western Ecology Working Group of...  0  
Comm #13185
 
Cassiope mertensiana / Luetkea pectinata Dwarf-shrubland
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.34025.CEGL001397
Western Ecology Working Group of...  0  
Comm #13186
 
Empetrum nigrum Dwarf-shrubland
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.33753.CEGL001399
Western Ecology Working Group of...  0  
Comm #13187
 
Quercus alba - Quercus velutina - Quercus stellata / Schizachyrium scoparium - Desmodium spp. Woodland
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.35178.CEGL003722
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro...  0 This is a fire-maintained woodland of the Piedmont of Virginia and South Carolina, occurring on soils derived from granitic rock. It may also persist in a slightly altered state due to particularly rigorous mowing regimes. Although the fire or mowing frequency is abnormally high at known sites (on Fort Pickett), this community may be quite similar to some presettlement Piedmont communities. Canopy dominants include <i>Quercus alba, Quercus velutina, Quercus stellata, Quercus falcata, Quercus coccinea, Carya alba, Carya glabra</i>, and <i>Liriodendron tulipifera</i>. The subcanopy may include <i>Cornus florida</i> and <i>Liquidambar styraciflua</i>, but can also be fairly open. Shrubs and woody vines include <i>Rhus copallinum, Rhus michauxii, Rhus glabra, Diospyros virginiana, Ulmus alata, Sassafras albidum, Vaccinium pallidum, Vaccinium stamineum, Hypericum hypericoides ssp. multicaule (= Hypericum stragulum), Toxicodendron pubescens, Vitis rotundifolia</i>. The herb layer is dominated by <i>Schizachyrium scoparium</i> or sometimes <i>Danthonia sericea</i>, and also includes <i>Desmodium laevigatum, Desmodium marilandicum, Desmodium nuttallii, Desmodium paniculatum, Desmodium perplexum, Desmodium ciliare, Eupatorium hyssopifolium, Eupatorium godfreyanum, Clitoria mariana, Eupatorium rotundifolium var. ovatum (= Eupatorium pubescens), Eupatorium sessilifolium, Eupatorium altissimum (= Eupatorium saltuense), Galactia regularis, Lespedeza procumbens, Dichanthelium dichotomum, Dichanthelium depauperatum, Solidago pinetorum, Solidago rugosa, Solidago nemoralis, Solidago erecta, Helianthus atrorubens, Coreopsis major, Liatris pilosa (= Liatris graminifolia), Andropogon ternarius, Tephrosia virginiana, Clitoria mariana</i>, and <i>Sorghastrum elliottii</i>. At Cowpens in South Carolina, historical accounts from the Revolutionary War (1781) all describe open fields in the area where this community now sits. Historic descriptions of upstate South Carolina uplands from as late as 1775 suggest woodlands and open areas covered with "grasses and the wild pea-vine, growing as high as a horse's back" were common. These historical accounts suggest that the remnants in South Carolina and Virginia may indeed approximate the vegetation of the upland areas of the Piedmont of 250 years ago. 
Comm #13188
 
CEGL000862
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.3466.CEGL000862 NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
EcoArt 2002  0  
Comm #13189
 
A.1950
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.1652.A1950
EcoArt 2002  0 Submontane pine forests with canopy dominated by ~Pinus caribaea var. caribaea$, on slatey sandstone, in western Cuba. 
Comm #13190
 
Taxodium ascendens / Panicum hemitomon - Polygala cymosa Woodland
» more details
accession code: VB.CC.35092.CEGL003733
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro...  0 This community type occurs in seasonally flooded depressional wetlands, especially in clay-based Carolina bays. The canopy is open (to closed, or scattered) and dominated by <i>Taxodium ascendens</i>. The herbaceous stratum is normally dense, and extremely variable in dominance from site to site, spatially within each site, and from year to year (depending on hydrologic conditions). Typical dominants include <i>Panicum hemitomon, Panicum verrucosum, Panicum rigidulum var. combsii, Leersia hexandra, Rhynchospora filifolia, Rhynchospora perplexa, Rhynchospora careyana, Dichanthelium erectifolium, Dichanthelium wrightianum, Scleria georgiana, Scleria reticularis, Polygala cymosa, Boltonia asteroides, Eriocaulon compressum, Lachnanthes caroliana, Eupatorium leucolepis, Pluchea rosea, Euthamia caroliniana, Rhexia aristosa</i>, and <i>Coelorachis rugosa</i>. 

««more pages

«previous  | 1311 | 1312 | 1313 | 1314 | 1315 | 1316 | 1317 | 1318 | page 1319 | 1320 |  next»
records 13181 through 13190 of 38961

more pages»»