• Media type: E-Book; Thesis
  • Title: Responses of forest trees to environmental change: disturbance and adaptive potential : How fast can long-lived plants react to environmental change?
  • Contributor: Würth, David Gabriel [Author]; Schnittler, Martin [Degree supervisor]; Gailing, Oliver [Degree supervisor]
  • Corporation: Universität Greifswald
  • Published: Greifswald, 18.09.2018
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (PDF-Datei: 121 Seite, 3471 Kilobyte); Illustrationen (farbig), Diagramme (teilweise farbig)
  • Language: English; German
  • Identifier:
  • RVK notation: AR 23100 : Klimaänderung
    WL 7950 : Pinaceae (Kieferngewächse)
    WM 2100 : Bäume
  • Keywords: Weißfichte > Klima > Klimaänderung > Klonierung > Genetik > Pilze
  • Origination:
  • University thesis: Dissertation, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät der Universität Greifswald, 2019
  • Footnote: Literaturangaben
    Zusammenfassungen in englisch und deutsch
  • Description: Klima, Climate change, Cloning, Genetic, Mycobiome, Picea glauca

    Global climate change is occurring all over the world, but in the Arctic the climate is changing more rapidly and drastically than in many other parts of our planet. Many species that are already at their climatic limit need to adapt to recent climate conditions or migrate in order to not go extinct. The possibilities of adaption include phenotypic plasticity and adaptation to various extents. This is also the case for white spruce P. glauca, which belongs to the conifers and thus in the largest group of gymnosperms still living today. Among the approx. 600 extant conifer species white spruce is one of the most widespread trees in North American boreal forests. Its range extends from 69° N in the Canadian Northwest Territories to the Great Lakes at about 44° N, where it occurs from sea level to an altitude of about 1520 m (Burns and Honkala, 1990). Site related, climate-dependent differences in white spruce reproduction can be seen as a strategy to survive under the harsh climatic conditions at Alaska's treelines: Besides sexual reproduction, the vegetative propagation occurs in the white spruce as an additional reproductive mechanism. This can be realized by "layering" when the lower branches of the tree crown touch the ground and develop roots to later grow as a separate individual with or without a connection to the mother tree. Known as other mechanisms of vegetative propagation are also the rooting of fallen trees which were not completely uprooted, and the "root ...
  • Access State: Open Access