Flora of Saskatchewan
Growth Period
Saskatchewan has a continental climate and seasonal variations temperature to provide a short growing season. On average, the province supports 159 to 160 frost free days in the far north to the icy dimishes number from 85 to 95 days free. In 1967, Canada created a map outling scientests Plant Hardiness Zones. Examine areas gradiations weather resistance such as the duration of frost-free period, summer rainfall, summer maximum temperatures, minimum winter temperatures and wind speed. The harsh environment plant is 0 and the mildest is rated as 8. The correlated data requirements of the plant. This test provides the address to which the plant can survive geograhical conditions the resistance of the area. A development in late 1800 encouraged settlers to continue farming. Red Fife wheat (Triticum aestivum) grown 20 days wheat before others, that the plants are left to ripen before frost of autumn.
Protected and invasive species
Saskatchewan has 367 rare species of vascular plants, of which 135 of them have been listed as endangered.
commitment Saskatchewan to the Agreement for the Protection of Endangered Species in Canada, which was ratified by provinces, territories and the federal government in September 1998,
askatchewan Environment and Resource Management Minister Lorne Scott (1999)
Not in the list Small White Lady of slippers (Cypripedium candidum) and the local extinction only (removed) from the plant. Endangered plants include sand verbena (Abronia micrantha), Western Spiderwort (Tradescantia occidentalis), Tiny Cryptantha (Cryptantha minima), and Hairy Prairie-Clover (Dalea villosa). Endangered plants include Cress Delgado mouse ear (Halimolobos virgata). These two reports to assist in the protection of plant species at risk and rare in SK Survey Guidelines the plant. Saskatchewan has noxious weeds implamented Act (NWA) to control introduced plants of Saskatchewan, which have become a threat to natural biodiversity as leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula). There are two reports; Invasive species and noxious weeds in Saskatchewan.
Section 13 (1) of the Act provides: "Any owner or occupier of the land to destroy noxious weeds on their land and prevent the spread of noxious weeds to other lands."
Oxious Weeds Act (NWA)
Provincial Symbols
The tree that was designated in 1988 as a symbol of Saskatchewan is the paper birch Betula papyrifera. Saskatchewan's provincial flower is the western red lily Lilium philadelphicum var. andinum (a protected species), appointed in 1941. needle and thread grass is grass Hesperostipa comata Saskatchewan provincial declared in 2001.
Floristic kingdom
Saskatchewan is within the Holarctic Kingdom. There are two regions within this realm, floristic region circumboreal or providing a cool temperate northern North America and the Atlantic region in southern Saskatchewan, part of a hot zone Midwestern Plains. These areas are characterized by a degree of endemism.
Ecoregions
An ecoregion covers soil types and highlight the similarities: 134. The Taiga Shield ecozone in the northern plateau includes Selwyn Lake and Lake Tazin dry ecoregion: 160. This would vegetation in general, which corresponds to the subarctic forest. The Boreal Shield ecozone is divided into the Athabasca River plain and upland Churchill. The Boreal Plains ecozone Highlands covers half of Boreal Lowland and Boreal Mid-boreal transition ecoregions. Further south is the prairie ecozone that is in the park aspen, mixed wet grassland, mixed grassland ecoregions Cypress highlands. Ecoregions are divided into Landscape: 160.
vegetative zones
Several biogeographic factors contribute to the richness and diversity of the flora of Saskatchewan. From north to south there are a variety vegetation zones. At the northern end are the subarctic forest and northern boreal forest. Southern boreal forest is north of the treeline. The prairie divided into the Aspen Parkland, wet meadows, mixed, mixed grassland, Upland Cypress and fescue grasses. In southeastern Saskatchewan are dry mixed prairie of the Great Hills Arena and the Cypress Hills area.
Subarctic forest
On the Canadian Shield and the best climate, forests are subarctic lichen. The black spruce (Picea mariana), Jack pine (Pinus banksiana) and white spruce (Picea glauca) are commonly occurring trees. This area is interspersed with bogs, marshes, wetlands, permafrost areas, and areas of tundra. Yellow and gray reindeer moss (Cladonia mitis) provide ground cover. Subarctic forests corresponds to the resistance zone 0a Canada.
Northern boreal forest
The circumpolar boreal forest or taiga is dominated by coniferous or aspen and poplar plantations.
Boreal forests
Throughout this area are the lakes, swamps, forests and rock outcrops. Black spruce, jack pine, once again are the main trees in the area. Wildfires are a concern in this area, and Fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) is produced in the burned areas. Cladonia and Cetraria tereocaulon C. are species of lichens that provide ground cover. Feather moss and step ladders Moss (Hylocomium splendens) and Hypnum are among the weeds. When the rock is soil cover, the forest has on the characteristics and species of the ecozone southern boreal forest. The area of plant resistance would 0b Zone.
Athabasca Basin offers an independent ecosystem. The Athabasca Sand Hills protected by the Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park is unique feature of the shield Canada. The hills are located in northern Saskatchewan and the edge of Lake Athabasca, which straddles the border with Alberta and Saskatchewan. There is little plant life in the sand hills area. Blueberry, bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi), Arena Heather (hudsonia tomentosa), Crow (Empetrum) and grasses survive here. This ecozone is 10 species of endemic plants. There are four unique species of Willow (Salix)
Southern boreal forest
Mixedwood boreal forests of jack pine, aspen (Populus tremuloides), white fir, and larch (Larix laricina) populate the southern boreal forest, which also home to the forest industry.
Bearberry
The ground cover of lichen and moss is step ladder. Bearberry, blueberry under forest (Vaccinium vitis-idaea), Red Osier dogwood (Cornus sericea, syn. Stolonifera C., Swid sericea) dominates the shrub layer. Swamps, marshes, complex marshes occur with wetter soils, as found over the basin of the Quaternary glacial Lake Agassiz in southeastern portion of the Jungle Southern Lights. 16% of the boreal forests are wetlands that have a water table at or above ground level. The province is the largest producer of wild rice.
Fungi, lichens, mosses and other bryophytes.
Marsh Labrador Tea (Ledum groenlandicum), sphagnum moss, and cloudberries (Rubus chamaemorus) bloom in peatland areas. Reservoirs have a layer high acid, high water table and low nutrient. Brown moss bogs support as Drepanocladus, Brachythecium, Calliergonelia, Scorpidium, Campylium. Reed Grass (Calamagrostis), willows, marsh cinquefoil (Potentilla), and false Solomon's seal (Maianthemum racemosum) gow in the region of swamps. Reservoirs have a high water table, slow drainage that is rich in nutrients. Reservoirs are surrounded by willows and support Marsh reed (Calamagrostis) Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis), Ave Blue Grass (Poa palustris), spike sedge (Carex rostrata), bulrush (Scirpus validus and S. acutus). Marshes have slow motion water slightly alkaline and are rich in nutrients and minerals. Marshes, swamps, marshes and muskeg together constitute regions. The 1st resistance describes the southern forest Lights.
Aspen Parkland
The Aspen Parkland transition corresponds to the eco-climatic grassland region with lower rainfall and higher average annual temperature of about 1.3 C (34.3 F).
Saskatchewan Flower: Western red lily protected species
Trembling aspen bluffs form (small islands or shelter belts) that are typical in this area. The Aspen Parkland is a transition zone between the mixed forest and grassland. Aspen park can be divided in the center and west. The eastern prairie produces with big bluestem grass (Andropogon Gerardi) and Porcupine grass (Stipa spartea). The trees in this area are Bur Oak (Quercus macrocarpa), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), Manitoba maple (Acer negundo), and balsam poplar (Populus sect. Tacamahaca) and poplar. Grasses like fescue grass Festuca hallii and Western porcupine grass (Stipa curtiseta) are native fescue grasslands of central Saskatchewan. The stands of poplar trees still poplar, and mixed with willows in the wetter areas.
Tree: Paper Birch
The park's western ground cover needle plains hard fescue and grass trhread (Hesperostipa comata). plantations of trees are poplars, willows and balsam poplar. Throughout the park aspen in wetter low-lying areas are dense shrubs. Saskatoon (Amelanchier alnifolia), pin cherry ((Prunus pensylvanica)), choke cherry (Prunus virginiana), hawthorn (Crataegus), the western snow-berry (Symphoricarpos), woods rose (Rosa woodsii), Wolf Willow (Elaeagnus commutata) and Canada buffaloberry some the bushes in the area. The marshes and meadow marshes support the Aspen Parkland flora similar to the marshes of southern Boreal Forest. Aspen park between 1b 2a and 2b of plant resistance areas.
Mixed prairie
Qu'Appelle Valley, near Cutarm, Sask., Around 1910
The grass sward is correlated to the arid grassland eco-climatic region and strength of the 2nd and 3rd zone. sandgrass Big, blue grama (Bouteloua gracilis) to grow grass in the dry highlands. At sites of low saline alkali grass (Puccinellia alroides) saltgrass (Distichlis spicata), foxtail or wild barley (Hordeum jubatum) and arrowgrass (Triglochin maritima) are found. Needle and thread grass, wheat grass North, hair sedge (Carex atherodes), bottle sedge (Carex rostrata) grow in damp places in between, with poplars and willows that grow on river banks.
Dry mixed prairie
Southwestern Saskatchewan has very dry weather. dry mixed prairie is located south of Cypress Hills and Great Sand Hills area, near the leader. prickly pear cactus (Opuntia), Blue Range, needle and thread grass, silver sage (Artemisia cana) and June grass (Koeleria) are in the areas.
Cypress Hills
The Cypress Hills has an elevation of more than 1,200 meters (3,900 feet), with lower temperatures and more precipitation results that are more similar to the boreal forests of the plains.
Cypress Hills
Lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) occurs only in the Cypress Hills area of Saskatchewan and in forests the Rocky Mountains. Aspen and white spruce are other trees in the forests of Cypress Hills. Shining leaf meadowsweet (Spiraea lucida), low larkspur (bicolor Delphinium), pinegrass (Calamagrostis rubescens) provide ground cover.
Ethnobotany
There are many plants native to Saskatchewan you can prepare vegetables, tea, wine, jams, syrup and flour. Other plants have medicinal qualities. The harvest of several plants varies. Shoots and leaves of some plants are harvested, while roots and tubers are collected as other potatoes. By locating the native plants is important to note that the harvest season and what to look habitats. Marshy pond edges reveal broadleaf cattail, or yellow pond lily (Nuphar advena).
Marsh area. Blueberry, strawberry, blackberry, banana, shaggy mane mushrooms, reeds, Labrador tea, bearberry, the blight of strawberries, mint and wild puffball mushrooms can be harvested around this site.
produce disturbed sites chickweed, and plantain (Musa). Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis) shoots growing near roadsides. Some plants are poisonous and edible plants that have looked equally poisonous.
Strawberry (Fragaria vesca), the tea leaves of wild mint (Mentha arvensis), and Labrador is filled with boiling water for tea. Saskatoons, blueberries and other berries can be picked by hand to make jams, jellies, syrup and juice preparation. Mora, blackberry, blueberry, buffaloberry, blueberry, currant, raspberry, pear, and rose hips, make delicious jams and jellies. Empanadas can be made of currant, blackberry, mountain ash, or strawberries, for example. grass seed hull and milled into flour.
solutions used as herbal remedies for ailments can be ingested as tea, which is used as ointments, poultices or inhaled the smoke or steam from a decoction. cow parsnip (Heracleum maximum) and plantain Broadleaf Water (Alisma plantago-aquatica) are two herbal remedies that were grown by Cree. However, the cow parsnip has a venomous species of resemblance, western water hemlock (Cicuta douglasii, poison hemlock).
Flora of Saskatchewan was also attended by human beings in other ways, the Trees provide wood such as birch bark canoes, the rods can be fashioned whistling and baskets. Sphagnum moss were used for their insulating qualities, mosses and absorbent diaper, and has antibacterial properties.
Botanists
Eugne Bourgeau (1813 – 1877) was the botanist who traveled with Captain John Palliser (1817 1887) and later Henry Youle (1823 – 1908) for the British American North Exploring Expedition.
O leafy spurge spurge invasive species
The results of these investigations between 1857 and 1861 on information reslted the area suitable for agriculture and a particular area of dry land was called Triangle the Palliser. John Macoun (1831-1920) was a naturalist who accompanied Sir Sanford Fleming to the prairies in 1872 and offered the region's agricultural possibilities. M. Isabel Priestley (1893-1946) was a botanist who did collecitons botanical and formed the Yorkton Natural History Society. Dr. William P. Fraser is the namesake of the WP Fraser Herbarium. His botanical collection was donated to the Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, where he taught. Later collections were transferred to the Department Fraser Plant Ecology, Faculty of Agriculture. Dr. John K. Jeglum was a research botanist with the Center for Great Lakes Forest (GLFC). He received his Ph.D. University of Saskatchewan in his thesis on the lowland vegetation in Candle Lake, in southern Saskatchewan Boreal Forest resulted in a sampling of Saskatchewan.
Agriculture
Main article: Agriculture in Saskatchewan
Harvest time
Saskatchewan Agriculture is the production of various food, feed and fiber products to meet national needs and international human and animal livelihood. The last agricultural economy to develop renewable biofuels production or agricultural biomass which is marketed as ethanol or biodiesel. plant breeding and production livestock have abandoned subsistence farming practices for technology intensive agriculture as a result of cash crops that contribute to the economy Saskatchewan. The product produced depends on the particular individual or ecozone biogeography Geography of Saskatchewan. Agricultural techniques and activities have evolved over the years. The first country lifestyle of nomadic hunter-gatherers and the ox and plow farmers early immigrants showing up in your section quarter of the earth in any way resemble the actual operating farmers huge amounts of land or livestock with its attendant technological mechanization.
Grain field in the park, near Saskatoon Aspen
Challenges for the future of Saskatchewan agriculture include the development of management sustainable water strategies for cyclical drought-prone climate in southwestern Saskatchewan, updating dryland farming techniques, stabilization functional definitions and protocols and the decision to grow or not grow genetically modified foods. Domestically and internationally, some products are faced greater control of disease and following marketing problems.
Canadian production of wheat, oats, flaxseed, barley, mainly from the provinces of Saskatchewan and the prairie. Saskatchewan still has the livestock along the southwest corner of the province however, the cultivation of cereals and crops such as wheat, oats, flax, alfalfa and rapeseed (canola in particular) dominate the area of the park. Mix cereals, dairy farms, grazing livestock and mixed lowland point of the central region of the province of the prairie. Since 1996, March 24 to 30 has been proclaimed Week of Agriculture in Saskatchewan.
Forestry
In the northern part of the province, forestry is significant. North of the line trees in Saskatchewan are 350,000 square kilometers (140,000 square miles) of forests that provide resources for the forest industry in Saskatchewan. The forest industry with sodium sulfate for wood and pulp and paper resources.
Physiographic Regions
Physiographic regions with some of the main features of the area
Physiographic Region
Base Geology
Dominant soils
Natural vegetation
Canadian Shield
Rock complex control
Precambrian igneous and Missi Series
Lodzolic forest soils
Lichen forests
black spruce
pine
Athabasca Plains
Precambrian Athabasca Formation
The land rough rock, the cornerstone exhibitions
pine
Central Lowland
Manitoba Lowlands
Cretaceous formations
Chernozemic soil
Aspen
fescue
Launches / wheat grass
Saskatchewan Plains
Cretaceous formations
Chernozemic soil
Aspen
fescue
Launches / grass Wheat
Great Plains
Alberta Plateau
Formations tertiary
And soil mixtures Regozolic solonetzic
spear grass / blue grama
See also
Canadian Prairies
Canadian geographic
Canadian Shield
Forestry Farm Park and Zoo
List of ecoregions in Canada
List of ecoregions (WWF)
List of ecoregions of North America (CCA)
List of Wildlife Species at Risk
Prairie
References
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External Links
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