About: Athyrium distentifolium is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 31 publications have been published within this topic receiving 568 citations. The topic is also known as: alpine lady-fern.
TL;DR: Comparison of population genetic diversity was undertaken in nine populations of Athyrium distentifolium using nine genomic and 10 expressed sequence tag (EST) microsatellite loci, and 265 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) loci from two primer combinations, revealing a mixture of significant and nonsignificant rank–order correlations.
Abstract: Woodhead, M., Russell, J., Squirrell, J., Hollingsworth, P.M., Mackenzie, K., Gibby, M., Powell, W. (2005). Comparative analysis of population genetic structure in Athyrium distentifolium (Pteridophyta) using AFLPs and SSRs from anonymous and transcribed gene regions. Molecular Ecology, Blackwell Publishing, 14, (6), 1681-1695/
TL;DR: Evaluated EST-derived SSRs provide robust, informative and potentially transferable polymorphic markers suitable for biodiversity research.
Abstract: The utility of EST-simple sequence repeats (EST-SSRs) was evaluated in the fern Athyrium distentifolium. From 1152 frond cDNA clones, 165 microsatellites, including di-, tri-, tetra and penta-nucleotide repeat motifs, were identified. Primer design was possible for 74 of the SSRs; subsequent screening of 10 loci on 186 individuals from six natural populations revealed between two and seven alleles per locus and expected heterozygosity (HE) estimates ranging from 0.027 to 0.809. Eight of these loci were further examined for cross-species and cross-generic amplification in other Woodsiaceae species, and polymorphic products were detected. EST-derived SSRs provide robust, informative and potentially transferable polymorphic markers suitable for biodiversity research.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the change in vegetation composition of three forest communities by resampling of releves recorded in the 1970s in the Bohemian Forest (Sumava Mountains).
TL;DR: It is concluded that the stumps play a more important role (relative to their covered area, 21–28 m2ha–1) in terms of suitable microsites for regeneration, than the logs do.
Abstract: Decaying logs and stumps provide an important seedling substrate in natural subalpine forests. However, only stumps present such a role in managed forests. The aim of this study was to assess the differences in the process of seedling colonization between logs and stumps. The study was carried out in the Czech Republic, in two old-growth subalpine spruce forests located in the Bohemian Forest and Ash Mts., dominated by Athyrium distentifolium Opiz and Vaccinium myrtillus L. undergrowth, respectively. Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) regeneration growing on logs, stumps and non-coarse woody debris (CWD) microsites was surveyed. Regeneration (height 0–2.0 m) densities exceeded 5000 individuals per ha on both sites. The average density of P. abies regeneration per square meter of substrate was 0.3-5.719.6 and 0.5-3.8-11.0 on non-CWD microsites, logs and stumps, located in A. distentifolium and V. myrtillus undergrowth, respectively. Stumps and non-CWD microsites dominated by V. myrtillus, supported a higher proportion of taller seedlings per plot compared to the small seedlings growing on logs and non-CWD dominated by A. distentifolium ground-cover. The disproportion in regeneration densities between the stumps and the original logs decreased with increasing stages of decay. The tallest regeneration growing on stumps (root-soil plates) was significantly older than that growing on the logs (stems). Based on these two latter findings, the stumps appeared to provide suitable seedling substrates several years earlier than the logs did. Therefore, we conclude that the stumps play a more important role (relative to their covered area, 21–28 m2ha–1) in terms of suitable microsites for regeneration, than the logs do.
TL;DR: The investigation shows that some of the observed differences in vegetational composition can be explained in terms of relatively simple soil and climatic variables measured for each quadrat, and ferns appear to be ecologically well separated.
Abstract: The aims of this paper are to detect floristic variation within different types of tall-fern dominated vegetation and to interpret these patterns in terms of environmental variables. Numerical approaches have been applied to a large and varied vegetational data-set with associated environmental data from stands dominated by Athyrium distentifolium, Thelypteris limbosperma, and Matteuccia struthiopteris in different parts of western Norway. The numerical procedures of two-way indicator species analysis, simple discriminant functions, and canonical correspondence analysis have been used, and the strengths and weaknesses of these as tools in discerning vegetational-environmental relationships are discussed. For each of the 96 quadrats investigated, 17 environmental variables were measured. The investigation shows that some of the observed differences in vegetational composition can be explained in terms of relatively simple soil and climatic variables measured for each quadrat. The ferns appear to be ecologically well separated. T. limbosperma-dominaled stands are mainly characterised by low soil fertility, high January temperature, and high humidity. A. distentifolium-dominated stands are associated with low winter temperatures, and M. struthiopteris-dominated stands have high soil fertility and high summer temperatures.