Arctic vegetation has distinct postglacial development characteristics compared to the more
temperate zones of lower latitudes. A study of postglacial
moraines conducted in the
Canadian Arctic on
Ellesmere Island have found that dwarf shrubs of
Dryas integrifolia and
Cassiope tetragona are often good indicators of vegetation development and progression. Dwarf shrubs have been found to increase with the age of the moraine, with
Dryas integrifolia becoming the most predominant. As well the cover of vegetation, including
lichens and
bryophytes showed consistent increase with the moraine age, suggesting directional vegetation development. It is also suggested that part of the high proportions of
polypoids occurring in arctic floras is the result of speciation as continental ice-sheets withdrew. Pollen diagrams from northern
Quebec, Canada, show advances throughout the
Holocene of post-glacial vegetation development. The initial phase of open vegetation began about 6000 years before the present. Following deglaciation,
shrub and herbaceous
tundra plants dominated for a brief period of time. Plants such as the
Larix laricina,
Populus and
Juniperus, were also important in the initial vegetation development. Some species that followed later include:
Alnus crispa, and
Betula. Though later vegetation development was mainly dominated by
Picea, shortly following deglaciation, they reached their present day limit. Today
black spruce is mainly dominant throughout much of northern
Quebec. The continental U.S. is considered to have strongly contributed to the re-establishment of postglacial vegetation in Canada following the last ice age. Roughly 300
taxa of
vascular plants and
mosses that were found to have existed below the extent of the last glacial period within the
United States were also found to have migrated to Canada. These patterns are recorded within either
pollen or macro fossils. == Anthropogenic Impact ==