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・ Dryandra subg. Dryandra
・ Dryandra subg. Hemiclidia
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Dryas integrifolia
・ Dryas iulia
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Dryas integrifolia : ウィキペディア英語版
Dryas integrifolia

''Dryas integrifolia'' is a species of flowering plant in the rose family known by the common names entireleaf mountain-avens, white mountain-avens, northern white mountain avens,〔(''Dryas integrifolia''. ) NatureServe.〕 and mountain avens.〔Aiken, S.G., et al. 2007. (Flora of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago: Descriptions, Illustrations, Identification, and Information Retrieval. ) NRC Research Press, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa.〕 It is native to northern parts of North America, where it occurs from Alaska across Canada to Greenland.〔〔 It is a common species of the Arctic and it is probably the most common flowering plant on some of the western Arctic islands.〔
This plant is a shrub, often a dwarf shrub. It forms a prostrate mat up to 10〔 to 17〔 centimeters tall, the stems branching horizontally along the ground. The leaves are borne on petioles that are covered in long, silky or woolly hairs. The leaf blades are linear to lance-shaped and measure up to 2.2 centimeters long. The blades have smooth upper surfaces and densely hairy undersides. The flowering stem has no leaves on it but is covered in long woolly hairs. It bears a single flower with up to 11 petals which are usually white but may be shades of yellow or cream. In the middle are many stamens tipped with yellow anthers. The styles start small and enlarge as the attached fruits mature, becoming up to 2.5 centimeters long and sporting a plumelike coat of long, fluffy hairs.〔 These plumes tangle together, and clumps of fruits fall away from the plant to be borne away on the wind.〔Au, R. (2006). (Dendroecology of the dwarf shrub ''Dryas integrifolia'' near Churchill, Manitoba (Thesis). ) University of Winnipeg.〕
Some flowers exhibit heliotropism, changing orientation to follow the sun. Others grow toward the position of the sun at noon.〔〔Krannitz, P. G. (1996). (Reproductive ecology of ''Dryas integrifolia'' in the high Arctic semi-desert. ) ''Canadian Journal of Botany''. 74:9 1451-60.〕 As the flower faces the sun it provides a resting spot for a variety of insects, being slightly warmer than surrounding surfaces.〔Wilmer, P., et al. (2005). ''Environmental Physiology of Animals''. 2nd Ed. Blackwell Publishing. Malden, MA. pg 651.〕
This species is actinorhizal, able to live in symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing bacteria. It can also form a symbiosis with the mushroom ''Hebeloma cylindrosporum'' via an ectomycorrhiza.〔Melville, L. H., et al. (1987). (Ontogeny of early stages of ectomycorrhizae synthesized between ''Dryas integrifolia'' and ''Hebeloma cylindrosporum''. ) ''Botanical Gazette'' 148:3 332-41.〕
This plant is common in many Arctic regions, growing in several types of cold, wet habitat. It can be found in tundra, meadows, river valleys, and scree slopes. It anchors well in rocky and gravelly substrates, and it thrives in soils with low organic content. It is a pioneer species in rough terrain.〔 It likely colonized wide areas of the Arctic as ice sheets receded.〔Tremblay, N. O. and D. J. Schoen. (1999). (Molecular phylogeography of ''Dryas integrifolia'': glacial refugia and postglacial recolonization. ) ''Molecular Ecology'' 8 7 1187–98.〕 This species dominates several Arctic habitat types, being the first plant to take hold in the scoured substrate and becoming the most abundant species in the area. It dominates a dwarf heath plant community along with sedges such as ''Carex rupestris'' in Montana.〔(''Dryas integrifolia'' - ''Carex'' spp. Dwarf Shrub Herbaceous Vegetation. ) Montana Natural Heritage Program.〕 In parts of northern Alaska it codominates bare, cryoturbated soils with the lichen ''Ochrolechia frigida'',〔(8. ''Dryas integrifolia''-''Ochrolechia frigida''. ) Toolik Arctic Geobotanical Atlas. Alaska Geobotany Center.〕 and moist coastal flats with ''Carex aquatilis'', a sedge.〔(9. ''Carex aquatilis''-''Dryas integrifolia''. ) Toolik Arctic Geobotanical Atlas. Alaska Geobotany Center.〕
The plant's ability to colonize denuded Arctic landscapes makes it a useful tool in revegetation efforts, particularly in habitat altered by mining. Once the plant takes hold, its dense, matlike form tends to accumulate organic matter. Increasing the organic cover in a barren mining zone is considered an important goal in revegetation efforts.〔Firlotte, N. and R. J. Staniforth. (1995). (Strategies for revegetation of disturbed gravel areas in climate stressed subarctic environments with special reference to Churchill, Manitoba, Canada: A literature review. ) ''Climate Research'' 5 49-52.〕
The Inuit have many names for the species, including ''malikkaat'', ''isuqtannguat'', ''isurramuat'', and ''piluit''. They monitored the status of the plant in order to track the seasons.〔
==References==


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