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Altitude zonation in the Pyrenees. A geobotanic interpretation
71
Citations
14
References
2007
Year
EngineeringGeomorphologyLandscape ZonationPhysical GeographySocial SciencesGeophysicsBiogeographyPhytogeographyPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionHigh Mountain ZoneGeodesyBiodiversityGeographyContinental EcosystemBiogeomorphologyHigh ElevationAltitude ZonationVegetation ZonationVegetation HistoryPaleoecologyMountain Uplift
We present a review of the main trends of vegetation zonation in the entire Pyrenean mountain system, including previous overviews and a great many papers on flora and vegetation. The main floristic territories are roughly set as parallel zones along the main axis. The high mountain zone forms a central core, characterized by the dominant Boreo-Alpine element. The Atlantic mid altitudes and lowlands (mainly on the north face of the chain) and the mid altitudes of the Iberian side bear Medioeuropean flora as their dominant element, but include a good representation of the transitional Submediterranean element. Lower down, the Iberian lowlands harbour dominant Mediterranean flora. This landscape zonation may be understood in terms of the Alpine model, by which high mountains include three belts (subnival, alpine, subalpine), the mid altitudes show one belt on the Atlantic face (montane) and two on the Iberian face (montane, submontane), and the low altitudes form a basal belt with two contrasting faces (Atlantic and
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