Issue |
E3S Web Conf.
Volume 420, 2023
EBWFF 2023 - International Scientific Conference Ecological and Biological Well-Being of Flora and Fauna (Part 1)
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Article Number | 01023 | |
Number of page(s) | 9 | |
Section | Advances in Crop and Plant Cultivation | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202342001023 | |
Published online | 04 September 2023 |
Distribution and habitat features of rare orchid species (Orchidaceae Juss.) in the National Park "Nizhnyaya Kama"
1 Kazan Federal University, Institute of Environmental Sciences, 420008 18 Kremlyovskaya str., Kazan, Russian Federation
2 Federal state budget institution "National Park "Nizhnyaya Kama", 423631 forest quarter 109 Tanaevsky forest, Yelabuga, Russian Federation
* Corresponding author: busmanof@kpfu.ru
The orchid species protected in the Republic of Tatarstan are sensitive to certain environmental conditions, therefore, when they are disturbed, they can disappear. As a result of studies carried out in 1998-2022 on the territory of the National Park "Nizhnyaya Kama" (Tatarstan, Russia), maps of the distribution of orchid species were built. It was revealed that only 7 species of orchids are found on the territory of the national park, which is 23% of the total number of orchids in Tatarstan, there are practically no meadow and wet-meadow orchids in the vast areas of meadowlands of the Nizhnekamsk reservoir. The background species is the unprotected Epipactis helleborine, which is noted in 61% of the descriptions with orchid species. The 4 species are noted in the conservation zone, 6 - in the specially protected zone, and 3 - in the recreational area. In dynamics, an increase in the distribution of P. bifolia and P. cucullata was noted. In 2019-2021, 2 habitats of Goodyera repens were found in the conservation zone. However, since 2010, the area of spruce-birch and pine-birch sphagnum communities has sharply decreased, where large populations of P. bifolia were noted. In recent years, D. incarnata has not been recorded since swampy meadows have practically disappeared. Forest species of orchids mainly grow in spruce-pine, coniferous-broad-leaved and coniferous-birch forests with a good moss cover.
© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2023
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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