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      An annotated checklist of the orchids of Nepal

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      Nordic Journal of Botany
      Wiley

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          The elevation gradient of lichen species richness in Nepal

          This study of elevation gradients of lichen species richness in Nepal aimed to compare distribution patterns of different life-forms, substratum affinities, photobiont types, and Nepalese endemism. Distribution patterns of lichens were compared with elevational patterns shown by a wide range of taxonomic groups of plants along the Nepalese Himalayan elevational gradient between 200–7400m. We used published data on the elevation records of 525 Nepalese lichen species to interpolate presence between the maximum and minimum recorded elevations, thereby giving estimates of lichen species richness at each 100-m elevational band. The observed patterns were compared with previously published patterns for other taxonomic groups. The total number of lichens as well as the number of endemic species (55 spp.) showed humped relationships with elevation. Their highest richness was observed between 3100–3400 and 4000–4100m, respectively. Almost 33% of the total lichens and 53% of the endemic species occurred above the treeline (>4300m). Non-endemic richness had the same response as the total richness. All growth forms showed a unimodal relationship of richness with elevation, with crustose lichens having a peak at higher elevations (4100–4200m) than fruticose and foliose lichens. Algal and cyanobacterial lichen richness, as well as corticolous lichen richness, all exhibited unimodal patterns, whereas saxicolous and terricolous lichen richness exhibited slightly bimodal relationships with elevation. The highest lichen richness at mid altitudes concurred with the highest diversity of ecological niches in terms of spatial heterogeneity in rainfall, temperature, cloud formation, as well as high phorophyte abundance and diversity implying large variation in bark roughness, moisture retention capacity, and pH. The slightly bimodal distributions of saxicolous and terricolous lichens were depressed at the elevational maximum of corticolous lichens.
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            Taxonomic Revision ofDienia(Malaxidinae, Orchidaceae)

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              Spiranthes spiralis(Orchidaceae), A New Record for the Nepal Himalaya

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nordic Journal of Botany
                Nordic Journal of Botany
                Wiley
                0107055X
                October 2013
                October 2013
                October 14 2013
                : 31
                : 5
                : 511-550
                Article
                10.1111/j.1756-1051.2013.01230.x
                64993430-75b2-497f-be8a-9b994663d129
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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