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    Kristian Hassel

    Large herbivores directly affect plant communities in alpine ecosystems. In addition, they may compete with, or facilitate foraging by, small herbivores and also cause strong indirect effects on plants. We used an exclosure experiment to... more
    Large herbivores directly affect plant communities in alpine ecosystems. In addition, they may compete with, or facilitate foraging by, small herbivores and also cause strong indirect effects on plants. We used an exclosure experiment to examine short-term (5-y) effects of cessation of sheep grazing on rodent grazing and plant communities in an oceanic alpine environment of low productivity with a
    Research Interests:
    Research Interests:
    ABSTRACT AimArctic plant species are often characterized by a complex genetic structure because of changes in their population size, the fragmentation of metapopulation systems, extensive hybridization and allopolyploidization, and... more
    ABSTRACT AimArctic plant species are often characterized by a complex genetic structure because of changes in their population size, the fragmentation of metapopulation systems, extensive hybridization and allopolyploidization, and survival in disjunct refugia, historical features associated with Pleistocene glaciation. We assessed the biogeographical and genetic patterns in three closely related northern species of peat-moss (Sphagnum inexspectatum, S. orientale and S. miyabeanum), especially interspecific hybridization, infraspecific geographical differentiation and Pleistocene survival in one or more refugial areas. We tested alternative hypotheses of refugial survival in three widely disjunct regions: eastern Asia, Alaska and Greenland.LocationNorth America (Canada, western USA and Greenland), China, Japan and Russia.Methods Four hundred and forty-three plants were genotyped at 12 microsatellite loci. Nucleotide sequences from 130 accessions for two plastid and two nuclear loci were used to reconstruct haplotype relationships. Population genetic analyses produced estimates of genetic diversity, levels of interspecific gene flow and rates of infraspecific intercontinental migration. Approximate Bayesian computation was used to test alternative biogeographical scenarios.ResultsWe found evidence of hybridization between two of the three species, but phylogenetic patterns are predominantly divergent rather than reticulate. Disjunct populations of one species, S. orientale, in Greenland, Alaska and China are genetically differentiated, but migration has occurred among all three metapopulation systems. Divergence-time analyses strongly support the hypothesis that S. orientale survived the Last Glacial Maximum in Beringia and also in Greenland.Main conclusionsOur results indicate that Beringia served as a refugium for peat-mosses, and therefore peatlands, which are currently extensive at high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. Sphagnum orientale also appears to have survived the Last Glacial Maximum in Greenland, indicating that the species persisted in multiple Pleistocene refugia. Phylogenetic patterns are relatively simple in these mosses compared with those commonly encountered in Arctic angiosperms.
    Page 1. Småkraftverk og sjeldne moser og lav Kunnskap og kunnskapsmangler Marianne Evju, Kristian Hassel, Dagmar Hagen, Lars Erikstad 696 Page 2. NINAs publikasjoner NINA Rapport Dette er en elektronisk serie fra ...
    ... 93 Østfold Moss Bevøya NL 92 98 (ED) 1814 II 07.08. ... På lokali-teten ved Jordalsgrenda ble grønnsko, i likhet med på Mulvikknuken, unntaksvis også funnet i sel-skap med marklevende moser, men på disse fore-komstene syntes grønnsko... more
    ... 93 Østfold Moss Bevøya NL 92 98 (ED) 1814 II 07.08. ... På lokali-teten ved Jordalsgrenda ble grønnsko, i likhet med på Mulvikknuken, unntaksvis også funnet i sel-skap med marklevende moser, men på disse fore-komstene syntes grønnsko i ferd med å bli utkon-kurrert. ...

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