Phytosociological table

The tables phytociologic result from raised phytosociological of ground drawn from the literature.

  1. marine Water: Oceanic and littoral marine water with watery vegetation primarily algale.

  2. Littoral maritime: Marine littoral with air vegetation, supporting salt, sometimes episodically submerged.
  3. watery Vegetations: Continental with sublittorales, soft water with brackish, in tablecloths free and levelling, of the lakes, ponds, ponds, rivers and rivers, of natural origins or created by the man.
  4. low Vegetation amphibian: Wetlands more or less amphibious, of the edges of lakes, ponds, of rivers, various sources and depressions, with low herbaceous vegetation more or less scattered, not recovering completely the ground.
  5. Roselières, cariçaies and mégaphorbiaies: Wetlands, sometimes amphibious, of the edges of lakes, ponds, rivers, rivers, torrents, sources, depressions various, with high herbaceous vegetation (roselières, cariçaies, mégaphorbiaies), recovering generally completely the ground.
  6. Peaty: High peat bogs, peat bogs low and trembling, boggy meadows.
  7. Walls, walls and fall: More or less vertical walls of the walls and nonmarine rocks; fall. More or less stabilized
  8. Flagstones and sands: Horizontal rock flagstones and more or less stabilized sands, zones with very surface grounds generally of weak trophic Level and supporting the dryness. Basophilic
  9. Lawns and hems: Lawns, steppes and basophilic hems developed on grounds rich in calcium, dry, rather surface and generally low in nitrogen.
  10. Lawns and hems acidophiles: Lawns, hems and long-lived grasses of the forest cuts on acid grounds.
  11. alpine Lawns: More or less extensively grazed permanent lawns, of the stages alpine to subalpine of the Alps and the Pyrenees.
  12. Meadows: Meadows eurosibériennes of the nitrogen rich person grounds fairly rich, undergoing varied husbandries (fertilization, amendment, mowing, pasture, fallow, sowing…)
  13. Cultures, waste lands, hems, cuts and clearings eutrophiles: Cultures, waste lands, forest cuts with disturbed grounds, more or less ruderalized hems nitrophiles, places, and natural zones of similar ecological natures (feet of cliffs, hems dune…). Trophic enrichment is related on the animals, the human actions, the symbiotic nitrogen fixing, or active mineralization in the ground consecutive with the breaks and the increase of sheet of water.
  14. Chaméphytaies (moors, garrigues, phryganeas…) : Moors and garrigues with woody hardy perennials (sub-shrubs chamephytic of a few decimetres in height, until approximately 1 m height).
  15. Bushes and hedges: Shrubby hedges and thickets, halliers, fruticées, maquis, matorrals, bushes, pre-coats and coats external, internal, and of forest cuts (shrubby edges), often linear but sometimes in space tablecloths, or more or less burst, made up of shrubs and shrubs.
  16. Wood and forests: Arborescent vegetations and herbaceous intraforestières, of the forests, arborescent wood and thickets.

Sources

  • the network Tela Botanica was given for mission the compilation of phytosociological tables. Classified by mediums, they are available to the Excel format on Internet site of Tela Botanica.

Random links:Bailleul (Northern) | Church Baptist | Policy of the Valley-of-Marne | Basilica Notre-Dame de Guadalupe of Mexico City | Isaac C. Singleton Jr. | Rose_de_Sharon