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bark lichens host:home.ccil.org

Listing 1 - 7 from 7 for bark lichens

American Elm
... 1981 ARMILLARIA SPECIES ARTWOOD TURNINGS (1of 10 items in folder) ash bowl AUSTRALIA BARK BARRIER ZONE BEECH BEECH BARK DISEASE (1 of 28 item + 1 sub folder) beech scale BIRCH BIRDSEYE BONSAI ... INECTS, MITES, ANIMALS (1 of 69 items + 2 sub folders) bronze birch borer KOREA LEAVES LICHENS, MOSS, OTHERS LOGS, LOGGING (1 of 35 items) log with mushrooms MAIN PAGE Text & Graphics ...
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... growth of other epiphytic and quasi-epiphytic communities. Climatic factors influence epiphytic communities, with lichens dominating drier ecosystems and bryophytes replacing them as conditions become wetter. The longevity of ... substrates. While wood may be slowly releasing nutrients, other parts such as the inner bark (phloem) decompose and release nutrients at rates similar to those of leaf duff. ...
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... is removing present and future cover, which the latter also would have provided for animals. Lichens, mosses, and liverworts also colonize fallen trees in decay class IV. Wood-boring beetles, termites ... and future habitat for internal communities. One example is certain species of salamander. As the bark becomes loose on a late class II fallen tree, lungless salamanders (Family Plethodontidae) join ...
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... would have also provided cover for animals, as would have the lichens, mosses, and liverworts that colonize fallen trees in decay class IV ... , and voles, which would have found cover under debris of sloughed bark and so called rotten wood alongside the class IV tree; ... often found under the loose bark. In fact, young clouded salamanders show a striking affinity for bark (McKenzie and Storm 1970). It ...
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... and Bednar, 1994). 126. With respect to fallen trees. Furrows in the bark on the upper side fill with leaf duff and provide sites for several years for seeds to germinate. Where the bark is intact, seedlings generally die during summer drought. If a ... for some trees species and many species of bryophytes, fungi, and lichens, and some flowering plants (Table 7.6) (Samuelsson et al. 1994; D ...
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... leaf duff and provide sites for several years for seeds to germinate. Where the bark is intact, seedlings generally die during summer drought. If a seedlings roots find a ... growth of other epiphytic and quasi-epiphytic communities. Climatic factors influence epiphytic communities, with lichens dominating drier ecosystems and bryophytes replacing them as conditions become wetter. The longevity of ...
home.ccil.org

temp
... growth of other epiphytic and quasi-epiphytic communities. Climatic factors influence epiphytic communities, with lichens dominating drier ecosystems and bryophytes replacing them as conditions become wetter. The longevity of ... substrates. While wood may be slowly releasing nutrients, other parts such as the inner bark (phloem) decompose and release nutrients at rates similar to those of leaf duff. ...
home.ccil.org