Herbfields are plant communities dominated by herbaceous plants, especially forbs and grasses. They are found where climatic conditions do not allow large woody plants to grow, such as in subantarctic and alpine tundra environments. Herbfield is defined in New South Wales (Australia) government legislation as native vegetation that predominantly does not contain an over-storey or a mid-storey and where ground cover is dominated by non-grass species.[1] The New Zealand Department of Conservation has described herbfield vegetation as that in which the cover of herbs in the canopy is 20–100%, and in which herb cover is greater than that of any other growth form, or of bare ground.[2]

Various kinds of herbfield include:

  • Tall alpine herbfield
  • Short alpine herbfield
  • Tussock herbfield
  • Wet herbfield
  • Aquatic herbfield

References

Notes

  1. NSW Dept of Environment, Climate Change and Water.
  2. Lux et al. (2009).

Sources

  • Lux, Jenny; Holland, Wendy; Rate, Stephen; Beadel, Sarah (2009). Natural areas of Te Paki Ecological District (PDF). Whangarei: Department of Conservation, New Zealand. ISBN 978-0-478-14474-1.
  • "Glossary: herbfield". BioBanking. Dept of Environment, Climate Change and Water, New South Wales. 2009-03-26. Retrieved 2010-10-16.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.