Glacial relict explained

A glacial relict is a population of a species previously common during a glacial period that retreated into refugia during interglacial periods.[1] They are typically cold-adapted species with a distribution restricted to regions and microhabitats that allow them to survive despite climatic changes.[2]

Examples

There are a wide variety of plant species which fit the category of glacial relict. The ones given here are a small selection of the much larger group.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Dítě . Daniel . Hájek . Michal . Svitková . Ivana . Košuthová . Alica . Šoltés . Rudolf . Kliment . Ján . Glacial-relict symptoms in the Western Carpathian flora . Folia Geobotanica . September 2018 . 53 . 3 . 277–300 . 10.1007/s12224-018-9321-8.
  2. Jiménez-Alfaro . Borja . García-Calvo . Laura . García . Pedro . Acebes . José Luis . 2016 . Anticipating extinctions of glacial relict populations in mountain refugia . Biological Conservation . 201 . 243–251 . 10.1016/j.biocon.2016.07.015.
  3. Kinsten, Björn . 2010 . De glacialrelikta kräftdjurens utbredning i södra Sverige (Götaland och Svealand) . 2010/7. Länsstyrelsen Blekinge län . 1–19 . April 19, 2019 . sv .
  4. Book: Hellgren . George . Ydre-Boken . 1960 . Linköping . 86–91. Något om växtligheten i Ydre. Filén. Thure. sv.
  5. Enright . Kelly . 5 October 2022 . Dreaming of Rediscovery: Botanists, Extinction, and the Tree That Sets the Brain on Fire . Environmental History . 27 . 4 . 665-691.
  6. Williams . Kevan . September 2014 . Have Tree, Will Travel . Landscape Architecture Magazine . 104 . 9 . 50, 52, 54, 56, 58 . JSTOR.