Abstract

By the establishment of the Greenland Botanical Survey in 1962 at the Botanical Museum, University of Copenhagen, an era of regular and systematic exploration of the vascular plant flora of Greenland was initiated and it ended in 1996, when funding ended. Preceding this period, the vascular plant flora was mainly known from the results of more sporadic botanical investigations mostly in low arctic West and East Greenland, but after the 1980s, investigations expanded to include the more inaccessible high arctic Northeast and North Greenland. Nowadays, vascular plant species have been collected from most regions of Greenland. So far, three regional phytogeographical studies of South, North, and West Greenland have been published, and at present, two papers dealing with the vascular plant flora of East Greenland are ready for publication. These studies will be the basis for a synopsis of the phytogeography of Greenland and a new edition of the Flora of Greenland. The published distribution maps from South, West, and North Greenland based on these collections have been digitized and used for modelling the regional vegetation and flora and its relation to past glaciations and current climate. The specimens from East Greenland have been entered into a database and will be available for future modelling projects.

Highlights

  • A detailed knowledge of flora and vegetation is a crucial prerequisite for ecological and environmental investigations

  • Detailed knowledge on the distribution of plant species in the past and present is crucial when predicting the ecological impact of the changing climate in the Arctic

  • Much smaller collections of vascular plants are held in the Herbarium of the Naturkunde Museum Münster, Germany, and the Utrecht Herbarium in the Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden, the Netherlands

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Summary

Introduction

A detailed knowledge of flora and vegetation is a crucial prerequisite for ecological and environmental investigations. Our knowledge of the flora of Greenland has increased during the last five decades and regional phytogeographical (Bay 1992; Feilberg 1984; Fredskild 1996b) and plant sociological studies have been carried out

Exploration of the flora of Greenland
The Greenland Botanical Survey
Published by NRC Research Press
Applied botanical research in Greenland
Full Text
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