The large-scale vegetation maps of the western coast of Peter the Great Bay (Far East, the Sea of Japan)
S. V. Osipov, V. P. Verkholat
DOI: https://doi.org/10.31111/geobotmap/1998-2000.50
Annotation
Two territories on the western coast of Peter the Great Bay were mapped in the large scale. The geobotanical mapping means revealing and displaying the essential regularities of vegetation cover. Both the spatial and temporal regularities of vegetation under natural and anthropogenic influences are well pronounced in the territory under consideration.
The concept of the vegetation spatial unit (vegetation complexes) was applied as a basis for mapping. The maps and their legend were worked out as a system of vegetation combination types (vegetation combination is a spatial unit of the supracoenotic level). Such categories, as vegetation of tops and slopes, lowlands and river valleys, sea coasts reflect maximal contrasts in vegetation cover, so they are the highest level divisions of the map legend. Types of succession series and stages of series are developed for construction of the second and third levels of the legend. Communities, similar in ecotope, total species composition, saplings and some other characteristics, are referred to one type of series. 5 types of series have been distinguished: dry, fresh, moist, very moist, wet. The main factor of dynamics in considered territory is fire and the series are mainly pyrogeneous. Series are presented as sequences of vegetation stages. The vegetation stages for tops and slopes are: closed low forest — open low woodland — shrub thicket with saplings — meadow with saplings, for lowlands and river valleys they are: open low woodland — thicket of saplings — meadow or mire with saplings.
Section: Articles
How to cite
Osipov S. V., Verkholat V. P. 2000. The large-scale vegetation maps of the western coast of Peter the Great Bay (Far East, the Sea of Japan) // Geobotanical mapping 1998-2000. St. Petersburg. P. 50–61. https://doi.org/10.31111/geobotmap/1998-2000.50