Plant communities of the Mongolian Transaltay Gobi

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Plant communities of the Mongolian Transaltay Gobi. / Von Wehrden, Henrik; Hilbig, Werner; Wesche, Karsten.

In: Feddes Repertorium, Vol. 117, No. 7-8, 01.12.2006, p. 526-570.

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Von Wehrden H, Hilbig W, Wesche K. Plant communities of the Mongolian Transaltay Gobi. Feddes Repertorium. 2006 Dec 1;117(7-8):526-570. doi: 10.1002/fedr.200611110

Bibtex

@article{ea51efd66ced4190aa3587c1114be19d,
title = "Plant communities of the Mongolian Transaltay Gobi",
abstract = "Here we present the first detailed phytosociological description of the plant communities of the Transaltay Gobi, the driest region within Outer Mongolia. It was originally gazetted as a national park by the Mongolian parliament in 1976, which included also the Dzungarian basin in south-western Mongolia. The status of the Great Gobi A National Park in the Transaltay Gobi, and the Great Gobi B National Park in the Dzungarian Gobi was later raised to the level of Strictly Protected Area. Since the area hosts many endangered wildlife species, we offer an initial vegetation description, which is necessary to understand the habitats of this arid ecosystem. Based on a modified Braun-Blanquet approach we designated eight zonal vegetation units, most of which are impoverished regional variants of vegetation types previously described from adjacent regions; most units contain several sub-units. The altitudinal gradient reflects the climatic regime in the study area; therefore the vegetation distribution follows the precipitation gradient regarding both vegetation cover and diversity. The most important diagnostic species are typical drought-adapted central Asian elements, namely Haloxylon ammodendron, Ephedra przewalskii, Reaumuria songarica and Anabasis brevifolia. Three new associations were designated based on our vegetation data. The main determinant for the riparian vegetation types is apparently groundwater availability, leading to locally high soil salt contents due to the high evaporation in the region. Poplar stands, reed beds and Tamarix stands are the characteristic vegetation types of the oases in the working area.",
keywords = "Biology, Anabasis, Ephedra, Ephedra przewalskii, Haloxylon ammodendron, Reaumuria, Tamarix",
author = "{Von Wehrden}, Henrik and Werner Hilbig and Karsten Wesche",
year = "2006",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1002/fedr.200611110",
language = "English",
volume = "117",
pages = "526--570",
journal = "Feddes Repertorium",
issn = "0014-8962",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH Verlag",
number = "7-8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plant communities of the Mongolian Transaltay Gobi

AU - Von Wehrden, Henrik

AU - Hilbig, Werner

AU - Wesche, Karsten

PY - 2006/12/1

Y1 - 2006/12/1

N2 - Here we present the first detailed phytosociological description of the plant communities of the Transaltay Gobi, the driest region within Outer Mongolia. It was originally gazetted as a national park by the Mongolian parliament in 1976, which included also the Dzungarian basin in south-western Mongolia. The status of the Great Gobi A National Park in the Transaltay Gobi, and the Great Gobi B National Park in the Dzungarian Gobi was later raised to the level of Strictly Protected Area. Since the area hosts many endangered wildlife species, we offer an initial vegetation description, which is necessary to understand the habitats of this arid ecosystem. Based on a modified Braun-Blanquet approach we designated eight zonal vegetation units, most of which are impoverished regional variants of vegetation types previously described from adjacent regions; most units contain several sub-units. The altitudinal gradient reflects the climatic regime in the study area; therefore the vegetation distribution follows the precipitation gradient regarding both vegetation cover and diversity. The most important diagnostic species are typical drought-adapted central Asian elements, namely Haloxylon ammodendron, Ephedra przewalskii, Reaumuria songarica and Anabasis brevifolia. Three new associations were designated based on our vegetation data. The main determinant for the riparian vegetation types is apparently groundwater availability, leading to locally high soil salt contents due to the high evaporation in the region. Poplar stands, reed beds and Tamarix stands are the characteristic vegetation types of the oases in the working area.

AB - Here we present the first detailed phytosociological description of the plant communities of the Transaltay Gobi, the driest region within Outer Mongolia. It was originally gazetted as a national park by the Mongolian parliament in 1976, which included also the Dzungarian basin in south-western Mongolia. The status of the Great Gobi A National Park in the Transaltay Gobi, and the Great Gobi B National Park in the Dzungarian Gobi was later raised to the level of Strictly Protected Area. Since the area hosts many endangered wildlife species, we offer an initial vegetation description, which is necessary to understand the habitats of this arid ecosystem. Based on a modified Braun-Blanquet approach we designated eight zonal vegetation units, most of which are impoverished regional variants of vegetation types previously described from adjacent regions; most units contain several sub-units. The altitudinal gradient reflects the climatic regime in the study area; therefore the vegetation distribution follows the precipitation gradient regarding both vegetation cover and diversity. The most important diagnostic species are typical drought-adapted central Asian elements, namely Haloxylon ammodendron, Ephedra przewalskii, Reaumuria songarica and Anabasis brevifolia. Three new associations were designated based on our vegetation data. The main determinant for the riparian vegetation types is apparently groundwater availability, leading to locally high soil salt contents due to the high evaporation in the region. Poplar stands, reed beds and Tamarix stands are the characteristic vegetation types of the oases in the working area.

KW - Biology

KW - Anabasis

KW - Ephedra

KW - Ephedra przewalskii

KW - Haloxylon ammodendron

KW - Reaumuria

KW - Tamarix

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33750366357&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/d3f69db0-b623-3612-b244-da095ebba34b/

U2 - 10.1002/fedr.200611110

DO - 10.1002/fedr.200611110

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 117

SP - 526

EP - 570

JO - Feddes Repertorium

JF - Feddes Repertorium

SN - 0014-8962

IS - 7-8

ER -

DOI