| Add/Drop |
Name
|
Reference
|
Plots↓
|
Description |
Comm #7581
|
Quercus alba - Quercus rubra - Acer saccharum Sand Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.19410.QUERCUSALBAQUER
|
Midwestern Ecology Working Group... |
0
|
This mesic sand forest may be found in the midwestern United States in central Illinois. Stands are thought to have occurred mainly on the slopes of sandy river terraces along the Illinois and Mississippi rivers. The dominant species in the tree canopy may be Acer saccharum, Quercus alba and Quercus rubra. |
Comm #7582
|
Rhynchospora microcarpa Herbaceous Vegetation » more details
accession code: VB.CC.35299.CEGL003981
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
|
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro... |
0
|
|
Comm #7583
|
Spartina bakeri Herbaceous Vegetation » more details
accession code: VB.CC.35113.CEGL003992
|
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro... |
0
|
This association encompasses <i>Spartina bakeri</i> tidal marshes of subtropical Florida. Additional information is needed regarding associated species and distinctiveness. |
Comm #7584
|
Quercus virginiana - Celtis laevigata - Quercus pagoda / Sabal minor Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.27376.QUERCUSVIRGINIA
|
Southeastern Ecology Working Gro... |
0
|
This association is a hardwood forest dominated by Quercus virginiana and Celtis laevigata, occurring on natural levees in the bottomlands of the extreme lower Mississippi River alluvial valley, and along antecedent courses of the Mississippi River now occupied by bayous of southeastern Louisiana. Other characteristic species are Sabal minor, Quercus pagoda, Acer rubrum, Fraxinus americana, and Liquidambar styraciflua. |
Comm #7585
|
Quercus chrysolepis - Calocedrus decurrens Forest » more details
accession code: VB.CC.25400.QUERCUSCHRYSOLE
|
Western Ecology Working Group of... |
0
|
|
Comm #7586
|
Salix planifolia - Betula pumila var. glandulifera Shrubland » more details
accession code: VB.CC.23140.SALIXPLANIFOLIA
|
Midwestern Ecology Working Group... |
0
|
|
Comm #7587
|
Carex aquatilis Boreal Herbaceous Vegetation » more details
accession code: VB.CC.31695.CEGL005289
|
Western Ecology Working Group of... |
0
|
|
Comm #7588
|
A.503 » more details
accession code: VB.CC.2148.A503
NOT CURRENTLY ACCEPTED
|
EcoArt 2002 |
0
|
This alliance includes woodlands dominated by ~Juniperus coahuilensis (= Juniperus erythrocarpa)$, occurring with a well-developed herbaceous stratum, with little, if any, shrub cover. Common associates include ~Quercus turbinella, Canotia holacantha, Quercus grisea, Quercus emoryi, Mimosa dysocarpa, Rhus trilobata, Bouteloua curtipendula, Bouteloua gracilis, Bouteloua chondrosioides, Bouteloua eriopoda, Muhlenbergia setifolia, Muhlenbergia emersleyi, Schizachyrium cirratum, Schizachyrium sanguineum var. hirtiflorum, Schizachyrium scoparium var. scoparium (= Schizachyrium scoparium ssp. neomexicanum), Lycurus$ sp., ~Bothriochloa barbinodis (= var. barbinodis), Eragrostis intermedia$, and ~Liatris punctata$. These woodlands often occur in association with ~Bouteloua$-dominated grasslands in western Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. |
Comm #7589
|
Serie de Cariniana estrellensis - Schinopsis brasiliensis » more details
accession code: urn:lsid:vegbank.org:commConcept:37073-{DCE31FA7-1A8A-4F15-B747-430FA2EC166D}
|
NatureServe Biotics 2019 |
0
|
Termotropical superior pluviestacional subhúmedo, 1100-1200 hasta 1800 m. Combinación florística diferencial: <i>Aiphanes aculeata, Anadenanthera colubrina, Aspidosperma cylindrocarpon, Aspidosperma macrocarpon, Astronium urundeuva, Cariniana estrellensis, Ceiba mandonii, Cereus tacuaralensis, Cinchona calisaya, Clusia ducuoides, Hedyosmum angustifolium, Hymenaea courbaril, Juglans boliviana, Maclura tinctoria, Maytenus ilicifolia, Opuntia brasiliensis, Piptadenia buchtienii, Piptadenia viridiflora, Schinopsis brasiliensis</i> y <i>Stylogine ambigua</i>. Principales áreas potenciales y/o actuales conocidas: Dept. La Paz (Yungas de Apolobamba, Coroico y Boopi). |
Comm #7590
|
Cephalanthus occidentalis / Glyceria canadensis Shrubland » more details
accession code: VB.CC.21412.CEPHALANTHUSOCC
|
Eastern Ecology Working Group of... |
0
|
This buttonbush swamp occurs in the northeastern United States. These swamps experience prolonged or semipermanent flooding for much of the growing season with water tables receding below the soil surface only during drought or very late in the growing season. They occur in a variety of environmental settings including backwater sloughs or oxbow ponds, wet swales in floodplains, pond and lake borders, and small, isolated depressions where water levels recede very slowly, such as those with perched water tables. Cephalanthus occidentalis is dominant and often monotypic. Occasional associates depend on the environmental setting and most often occur in drier areas. They include Vaccinium corymbosum, Rhododendron viscosum, Acer rubrum, Cornus spp., closer to upland borders or Acer saccharinum, Fraxinus pennsylvanica, or Viburnum dentatum where adjacent to floodplains, or Decodon verticillatus, Chamaedaphne calyculata, and Spiraea alba var. latifolia in more stagnant basins. Herbaceous species tend to be sparse, but can include Glyceria canadensis, Dulichium arundinaceum, Carex stricta, Scirpus cyperinus, Thelypteris palustris, Alisma plantago-aquatica, Polygonum spp., Sparganium spp. and floating or submerged aquatic species such as Lemna minor, Potamogeton natans, and Nuphar lutea ssp. variegata (= Nuphar variegata). Bryophytes, if present, cling to shrub bases and include Warnstorfia fluitans (= Drepanocladus fluitans), Drepanocladus aduncus, or Sphagnum fallax. |