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Botanical Journal of the North Caucasus

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Alien plant species of the Mashuk mountain

https://doi.org/10.33580/2409-2444-2020-6-2-65-77

Abstract

The preservation of biological diversity is impossible without the preservation of natural vegetation.

Changes in physical and geographical conditions, succession of phytocenoses, lead to transformation of growing conditions and loss of ecological niches by species. Simultaneously with these processes, the number of alien species increases. Their expansion is facilitated by violations of habitats with natural vegetation cover. Surveys of the slopes of mount Mashuk revealed the distribution of 30 alien species of tree flora from 17 families. Half of them overcame the restrictions of reproduction, but could not pass the barrier associated with the spread of diasporas: Acer negundo, Aesculus hippocastanum, Catalpa speciosa, Celtis occidenatalis, Colutea orientalis, Gleditsia triacanthos, Hedera helix, Juglans regia, Lonicera tatarica, Mahonia repens, Malus domestica, Prunus armeniaca, Robinia viscosa, Spiraea vanhoutei, Vitis vinifera. Nine species — Acer pseudoplatanus, Amorpha fruticosa, Laburnum anagyroides, Morus alba, Morus nigra, Prunus mahaleb, Robinia pseudoacacia, Rubus ibericus and Vinca minor — settle and naturalize in disturbed, seminatural, and natural habitats. Fraxinus pennsylvanica, Platycladus orientalis, Syringa vulgaris are phytocenosotransformers, and Clematis vitalba is a biogeocenosotransformer.

About the Authors

D. S. Shilnikov
Perkalski arboretum of Komarov Botanical Institute RAS
Russian Federation

Shil'nikov Dmitriy Sergeevich, Candidate of biology, director of the Pyatigorsk ecological and Botanical station of the Komarov Botanical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences

357506, Pyatigorsk, Energetik settlement; tel.: +7-905-467-11-00



G. A. Soltani
Sochi National Park
Russian Federation

Soltani Galina Alexandrovna, Candidate of biology, leading researcher of the Sochi National Park

354002, Sochi, Kurortnyi pr., 74; tel.: +7-918-916-11-99



References

1. Arkhiv klimaticheskikh dannykh. http://climatebase.ru/station/37050/ (Date of access: 26 VI 2020).

2. Baranova O. G., Shcherbakov A. V., Senator S. A., Panasenko N. N., Sagalaev V. A., Saksonov S. V. 2018. The main terms and concepts used in the study of alien and synanthropic flora. Phytodiversity of Eastern Europe 12(4): 4–22. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.24411/2072-8816-2018-10031

3. Soltani G. A. 2017. Use of the term invasive in plant introduction. Ekologiya: racional'noe prirodopol'zovanie i bezopasnost' zhiznedeyatel'nosti: Sbornik materialov Vserossijskoi nauchno-prakticheskoi konferencii, s mezhdunarodnym uchastiem Chast’ 1 [Ecology: rational nature management and life safety: Materials of the All-Russian scientific and practical conference, with international participation. Part 1]. Maikop: 86–88. (In Russ.).

4. The Plant List. 2020. http://www.theplantlist.org (Date of access: 26 VI 2020).


Review

For citations:


Shilnikov D.S., Soltani G.A. Alien plant species of the Mashuk mountain. Botanical Journal of the North Caucasus. 2020;(2):65-77. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.33580/2409-2444-2020-6-2-65-77

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ISSN 2409-2444 (Print)