Abstract

Fifty-seven taxa belonging to 17 genera of testate rhizopods were recorded in samples of mosses, soils and lichens, collected from the Truelove and Sparbo Hardy Lowlands on the high arctic Devon Island (NWT, Canada). Different groups of habitats are characterized by particular assemblages of Testacea species, with the quantity and quality of the available water as important ecological parameters. The Assulina muscorum-Corythion dubium assemblage characterizes the most dry and acidic moss habitats, while the Paraquadrula irregularis assemblage is to be found in wet and rather neutral habitats. The sedge moss meadows with their more moderately coarse textured and poorly drained soils, bear a Plagiopyxis callida-Plagiopyxis declivis soil-dwelling testate amoebae assemblage. The Centropyxis minuta assemblage lives in the most coarsely textured soils. pH seems to play a subordinate role, not only in the mosses but also in the soils. Multivariate methods (cluster analysis and CANOCO) have been used to separate these different assemblages.

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