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Featured researches published by Gerald A. Wheeler.


Archive | 1987

The Natural and Anthropogenic Acidification of Peatlands

Eville Gorham; Joannes A. Janssens; Gerald A. Wheeler; Paul H. Glaser

Peatlands are ubiquitous in northern landscapes, and decomposition of their plant remains produces complex, coloured organic acids that acidify their waters and those of the streams and lakes into which they drain. Fens with weakly acid surface waters (pH about 6) and low alkalinity (about 40 μeq.L−1) are vulnerable to rapid change, and may be acidified by invasion of carpet-forming Sphagnum mosses that bring about major alterations in their biotic communities. The plant communities of such fens include a mixture of species characteristic of both minerotrophic and ombrotrophic peatlands.


American Midland Naturalist | 1983

Contributions to the flora of the Red Lake Peatland, northern Minnesota, with special attention to Carex

Gerald A. Wheeler; Paul H. Glaser; Eville Gorham; Clifford M. Wetmore; Frank D. Bowers; Joannes A. Janssens

The Red Lake Peatland, situated in N-central Minnesota, is the largest continuous mire in the northern portion of the contiguous United States. It consists of a mixture of ombrotrophic bogs and minerotrophic fens organized into a complex of highly distinctive landforms, including open bogs, wooded bogs, Sphagnum lawns, strings, flarks, fen-pools and wooded islands. The bogs are poor in species and occupy acid sites with water poor in mineral salts; the minerotrophic areas are floristically richer and can be divided into poorand rich-fen sites. Ditching and roadbuilding in certain portions of the peatland have produced drastic changes in the vegetation and landscape as a result of obstructed water tracks flooding upstream and drying out downstream. The peatland, which occupies a large area of gentle slope and poor drainage, has a flora that is relatively impoverished. In all, 331 plant taxa were recorded from the mire, including 195 vascular plants, 67 bryophytes and 69 lichen taxa. Members of the Cyperaceae account for 23 % of the vascular flora, and the largest genus in the mire is Carex with 29 species. Each landform feature is distinctive in its floristic composition, and the vascular and nonvascular taxa associated with the different physiographic features are discussed. This paper provides an account of Carex in the peatland and discusses the differential response by members of the genus to gradients of nutrition, shading and hydrology. Some carices grow best under acid conditions, thus frequenting ombrotrophic and poor-fen sites, whereas other species grow best in rich-fen sites. Carex species useful in separating areas of ombrotrophy from those of poor fen are indicated, as are those carices that serve as obligate rich-fen indicators. The floristic similarities between the Red Lake Peatland and 14 other peatlands in North America and northern Europe are discussed, and the ombrotrophic bog flora of the Red Lake Peatland is compared to the bog floras of the Hudson Bay lowlands and northern Fennoscandia.


Brittonia | 1986

Two new species of Carex (Cyperaceae) from austral South America and additional taxonomic and phytogeographical notes on the genus

Gerald A. Wheeler

Two new species ofCarex (Cyperaceae) are described from southern South America.Carex transandina occurs in naturally-deposited rock talus and scree in southwestern Chile andC. austroamericana occurs in the Patagonian steppe in Chile and Argentina. In the past, specimens ofC. austroamericana have been erroneously referred toC. andina var.subabscondita Kük., and it is shown here that the latter entity is conspecific withC. nelmesiana Barros. The taxonomy ofC. nelmesiana is presented and its relationship to other members ofCarex sect.Junciformes (Boeckl.) Kük. is discussed.


Journal of Ecology | 1981

The patterned mires of the Red Lake Peatland, northern Minnesota: vegetation, water chemistry, and landforms

Paul H. Glaser; Gerald A. Wheeler; Eville Gorham; H. E. Wright


Botany | 1992

A major floristic boundary in Minnesota: an analysis of 280 taxa occurring in the western and southern portions of the state

Gerald A. Wheeler; Edward J. Cushing; Eville Gorham; Thomas Morley; Gerald B. Ownbey


Darwiniana | 2003

NOTES ON SOUTH AMERICAN CAREX (CYPERACEAE): C. CAMPTOGLOCHIN AND C. MICROGLOCHIN

Gerald A. Wheeler; Encarnación R. Guaglianone


Darwiniana | 2002

CAREX (CYPERACEAE) FROM SOUTH AMERICA: THREE NEW SPECIES AND SOME NAME CHANGES

Gerald A. Wheeler


Hickenia | 1996

A new combination in South American Carex (Cyperaceae) and additional notes on the genus

Gerald A. Wheeler


Darwiniana, nueva serie | 2005

Una nueva especie de Uncinia (Cyperaceae) del Nuevo Mundo y primera cita de U. chilensis para la Argentina

Gerald A. Wheeler


Darwiniana, nueva serie | 2003

Notas sobre Carex (Cyperaceae) de Sud América: C. camptoglochin y C. microglochin

Gerald A. Wheeler; Encarnación R. Guaglianone

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H. E. Wright

University of Minnesota

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