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Growth of Salix Setchelliana on a Kluane River Point Bar, Yukon Territory, Canada

D. A. Douglas
- 01 Feb 1987 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 1, pp 35-43
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that the narrow limits of the setchell willow population are associated with specific abiotic factors, such as flooding, flooding, and soil fertility.
Abstract
Setchell willow (Salix setchelliana Ball) is a prostrate clonal species, producing vertical shoots (to about 3 dm) from a shallow horizontal root system. Clonal growth, measured by number of shoots, number of branches, and number of catkins per square meter, was greatest at the middle elevations of a point bar stand, approximately 20 m wide. This paper shows that the narrow limits of this population are associated with specific abiotic factors. The Kluane River (Yukon Territory) shows a yearly fluctuation with highest water at the time of maximum glacial melt in mid-August. Willow shoots closest to the channel are inundated for approximately 60% of their growing season; inundation may set the lower limit of clonal growth. Depth of deposited material increased away from the channel, resulting in deeper horizontal root systems. Substrate in the upper zone, farthest from the channel, had the highest percentage of fines and the highest field water content. Several shoots with decomposed bases were found in th...

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Primary Succession and Ecosystem Rehabilitation

TL;DR: This paper provided the first comprehensive summary of how plant, animal and microbial communities develop under the harsh conditions following such dramatic disturbances, and examined the basic principles that determine ecosystem development and applied the general rules to the urgent practical need for promoting the reclamation of damaged lands.
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Plant population patterns in a glacier foreland succession: pioneer herbs and later‐colonizing shrubs

TL;DR: The focus is population-level studies of six key pioneer plants, finding that processes involved in species turnover include both allogenic and autogenic elements and that autogenic factors become more significant whilst species-environment relations become tighter in later phases of vegetation development.
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Floristic Variation Among Gravel Bars in a Subalpine River, Montana, USA.

TL;DR: Differences in abundances between native herbaceous species and European ruderals and between Populus and Salix species suggest that founder effects may be important and segregated by adaptations suggestive of successional pathway and successional stage.
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Clonal growth of Salix setchelliana on glacial river gravel bars in Alaska

D. A. Douglas
- 01 Mar 1989 - 
TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to describe the growth and demography of S. setchelliana clones and their component shoots, and to relate observed patterns to the transitory environment.
References
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OtherDOI

River flood plains: Some observations on their formation

TL;DR: A terrace, flood plain by the frequency with consists of channel and overbank deposits as mentioned in this paper, the latter is generally very small and it is difficult to differentiate between channels and overbanks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bottomland Vegetation Distribution along Passage Creek, Virginia, in Relation to Fluvial Landforms

Cliff R. Hupp, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1985 - 
TL;DR: Results and related field observations suggest that certain species are significantly associated with specific fluvial landforms, which may therefore be used as indicators for particular hydrogeomorphic site conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Character of Channel Migration on the Beatton River, Northeast British Columbia, Canada

TL;DR: In this paper, Dendrochronological surveys on ten point-bar complexes on the Beatton River, northeast British Columbia, provide the basis for measurement of lateral migration and incision during the last 250 yr. The rate of channel bend migration reaches a maximum value where the ratio radius of channel curvature to stream width approximates 3.0.
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Flooding and plant growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe and analyse many of the responses that plants display when subjected to waterlogging of the soil or deeper submergence, and demonstrate how plant biology can be harnessed to improve stress tolerance in an important crop species while simultaneously improving basic understanding of tolerance mechanisms and plant processes.
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