454 resultados para Bartsia alpina
Resumo:
Hintergrund: Miniaturisierung ist ein häufig beobachtetes Phänomen bei Pflanzen in arktisch-alpinen Lebensräumen und wird als Anpassung an niedrige Jahresmitteltemperaturen und eine kurze Vegetationsperiode interpretiert. Ziele: In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird im Petasites-Clade (Petasites Mill., Endocellion Turcz. ex Herder, Homogyne Cass., Tussilago L.; Asteraceae) und in Soldanella (Primulaceae) die Evolution der Miniaturisierung arktisch-alpiner Arten untersucht. Zudem wird innerhalb von Homogyne untersucht, ob unterschiedliche edaphische Präferenz von H. alpina (variabel) und H. discolor (kalkliebend) genetisch fixiert ist. rnMethoden: Molekulare Phylogenien des Petasites-Clades und von Soldanella wurden mit nukleären und plastidären Markern erstellt, und mit den in den Alpen vorkommenden Soldanella-Arten wurde zudem eine Fingerprint-Studie (AFLPs) gemacht. Zur Datierung der Diversifizierungsereignisse im Petasites-Clade diente eine molekulare Uhr, und die Evolution von Miniaturisierung wurde rekonstruiert. Mit H. alpina und H. discolor wurde ein vergleichendes Kulturexperiment durchgeführt.rnErgebnisse: Miniaturisierung entstand mehrere Male unabhängig voneinander in den arktisch-alpinen Vertretern des Petasites-Clade, aber nicht alle arktisch-alpinen Arten sind klein. Das Alter der arktisch-alpinen Arten deutet darauf hin, dass diese Taxa ihren Ursprung in der arkto-tertiären Flora haben. In Soldanella sind reduzierte Blütenmorphologie sowie Kleinwüchsigkeit der beiden alpinen Arten zweimal parallel entstanden. Homogyne alpina und H. discolor zeigen keine edaphischen Unterschiede hinsichtlich des Keimverhaltens, aber in Kultur zeigt sich, dass die Präferenz von H. discolor für Kalk wahrscheinlich genetisch fixiert ist.rnSchlussfolgerungen: Miniaturisierung von Pflanzen in größerer Höhe und höherer geographischer Breite kann in der Regel beobachtet werden. Allerdings kann die Evolution arktisch-alpiner Arten auch durch Faktoren wie Nährstoffverfügbarkeit, Konkurrenz und Störung beeinflusst werden, die dem Effekt der Temperatur entgegenwirken, so dass nicht alle Pflanzen in arktisch-alpinen Habitaten klein sind. Blütenmorphologische Reduktion in Soldanella kann als Anpassung an einen höheren Grad an Selbstbestäubung interpretiert werden, um eine geringere Bestäuberaktivität im alpinen Lebensraum zu kompensieren.
Resumo:
Il fine ultimo di questo lavoro è di analizzare ed interpretare alcuni parametri morfometrici che riguardano bacini in roccia e canali di colate detritiche nelle Dolomiti, estrapolati tramite l’analisi di un DEM derivato da rilievo LiDAR. La procedura, implementata in ambiente GIS, è basata sull’analisi di mappe raster morfometriche derivate dalla rappresentazione digitale del terreno. L’elevata risoluzione di questi modelli digitali del terreno (1m) ha permesso uno studio approfondito della morfologia delle colate detritiche nell’area alpina. L’area di studio, nel comune di Cortina D’Ampezzo, è caratterizzata da frequenti eventi di colata detritica a causa della particolare e caratteristica morfologia dolomitica che si sviluppa in altezza con imponenti testate rocciose ed alla loro base con conoidi detritici. I bacini di roccia sono di piccole dimensioni, mentre la lunghezza dei canaloni può variare in base alla pendenza e alla litologia del luogo. In questo tipo di ambiente la causa principale di innesco di tali fenomeni sono i temporali ad elevata intensità i quali trasformano il materiale di deposito in un fluido che scende, grazie alla pendenza, con velocità elevate attraverso i canali. Raggiunte pendenze basse il fluido si arresta e il materiale viene depositato. In questo studio le zone d’innesco di colata detritica sono state indagate con metodologie quali la fotointerpretazione confrontata con il DEM e la modellazione spazialmente distribuita, una procedura automatica volta ad identificare i possibili punti d’innesco e basata sulla relazione tra pendenza locale e area contribuente. Tramite i punti d’innesco individuati con fotointerpretazione sono stati estratti i relativi bacini di colata. In principio sono stati analizzati e interpretati i parametri morfologici e idrologici che caratterizzano i bacini in roccia e i loro rispettivi canali di colata tramite istogrammi di frequenza. Successivamente sono stati confrontati i parametri più significativi attraverso l’uso di grafici a dispersione. Nello studio è stata posta particolare attenzione soprattutto a quei bacini considerati attivi tramite la raccolta di fonti storiche, con l’obbiettivo di analizzare dettagliatamente i parametri morfometrici che risultano essere direttamente legati all’attività dei bacini.
Resumo:
Alpine grasslands are ecosystems with a great diversity of plant species. However, little is known about other levels of biodiversity, such as landscape diversity, diversity of biological interactions of plants with herbivores or fungal pathogens, and genetic diversity. We therefore explored natural and anthropogenic determinants of grassland biodiversity at several levels of biological integration, from the genetic to the landscape level in the Swiss Alps. Differences between cultural traditions (Romanic, Germanic, and Walser) turned out to still affect land use diversity and thus landscape diversity. Increasing land use diversity, in turn, increased plant species diversity per village. However, recent land use changes have reduced this diversity. Within grassland parcels, plant species diversity was higher on unfertilized mown grasslands than on fertilized or grazed ones. Most individual plants were affected by herbivores and fungal leaf pathogens, reflecting that parcels harbored a great diversity of herbivores and pathogens. However, as plant damage by herbivores and pathogens was not severe, conserving these biological interactions among plants is hardly compromising agricultural goals. A common-garden experiment revealed genetic differentiation of the important fodder grass Poa alpina between mown and grazed sites, suggesting adaptation. Per-village genetic diversity of Poa alpina was greater in villages with higher land use diversity, analogous to the higher plant species diversity there. Overall, landscape diversity and biodiversity within grassland parcels are currently declining. As this contradicts the intention of Swiss law and international agreements, financial incentives need to be re-allocated and should focus on promoting high biodiversity at the local and the landscape level. At the same time, this will benefit landscape attractiveness for tourists and help preserve a precious cultural heritage in the Swiss Alps.
Resumo:
Plant survival in alpine landscapes is constantly challenged by the harsh and often unpredictable environmental conditions. Steep environmental gradients and patchy distribution of habitats lead to small size and spatial isolation of populations and restrict gene flow. Agricultural land use has further increased the diversity of habitats below and above the treeline. We studied the consequences of the highly structured alpine landscape for evolutionary processes in four study plants: Epilobium fleischeri, Geum reptans, Campanula thyrsoides and Poa alpina. The main questions were: (1) How is genetic diversity distributed within and among populations and is it affected by altitude, population size or land use? (2) Do reproductive traits such as allocation to sexual or vegetative reproduction vary with altitude or land use? Furthermore, we studied if seed weight increases with altitude. Within-population genetic diversity of the four species was high and mostly not related to altitude and population size. Nevertheless, genetic differentiation among populations was pronounced and strongly increasing with distance. In Poa alpina genetic diversity was affected by land use. Results suggest considerable genetic drift among populations of alpine plants. Reproductive allocation was affected by altitude and land use in Poa alpina and by succession in Geum reptans. Seed weight was usually higher in alpine species than in related lowland species. We conclude that the evolutionary potential to respond to global change is mostly intact in alpine plants, even at high altitude. Phenotypic variability is shaped by adaptive as well as by random evolutionary processes; moreover plastic responses to growth conditions seem to be crucial for survival of plants in the alpine landscape.