Abstract

Abstract Sibbaldia procumbens occurs in arctic and alpine environments in widely disjunct locations in North America, Europe, and Asia. It is one of the rarest native plants in New England, with only a single station in New Hampshire. To inform conservation efforts for this species near the southeastern periphery of its North American range, we studied S. procumbens in alpine snowbeds on the Uapishka Plateau (Monts Groulx) in central Quebec, a relatively poorly known mountain range in the Grenville geologic province where the species is abundant enough to evaluate associated site characteristics. Sibbaldia procumbens was positively correlated with slope, southern aspect, and elevation, with the highest abundances associated with 22–26° slopes, 100–230° aspect, and elevations of 1024–1039 m. At our site in Quebec, S. procumbens was more abundant in association with bare rock, supporting the findings of previous authors that S. procumbens may benefit from some level of disturbance. We also quantified the do...

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