Evaluated publications containing records of lichens of Nunavut (Canada)
Version 1 December 2017

 

  1. Ahti, T. & I. M. Brodo, 1981: Cladonia labradorica, sp. nov., and C. kanewskii in Canada. - Bryologist 84: 238 - 241.

  2. Barrettt, P. E. & J. W. Thomson, 1975: Lichens from a hight arctic coastal lowland, Devon Island, N.W.T. - Bryologist 78: 160 - 167.
  3. Brodo, I. M., 1976: Lichenes Canadenses Exsiccati: Fascicle II. - Bryologist 79: 385 - 405.

  4. Gould, W. A., 1994: Macrolichens of the Coppermine, Hood, and Thomsen Rivers, Northwest Territories, Canada. - Bryologist 97, 1: 42-46.

  5. Thomson, J. W. & W. A. Weber, 1992: Lichens collected on the Arctic excursion of the 9th International Botanical Congress (Montreal) in 1959. - Bryologist 95, 4: 392-405.

  6. Westberg, M., 2010: The identity of Candelariella canadensis. - Lichenologist 42, 1: 119 - 122.

  7. Zhurbenko, M. P. & F. J. A. Daniels, 2003: New or rarely reported lichenicolous fungi and lichens from the Canadian Arctic. - Mycotaxon 88: 97 - 106.

 

Not evaluated:

 

  1. Brodo, I. M., 2009: Calvitimela talayana (Ascomycotina, Lecanorales), an interesting disjunction in North America. - Opuscula Philolichenum 7: 1-6.

  2. Chiarenzelli, J., L. Aspler, C. Dunn, B. Cousens, D. Ozarko & K. Powis, 2001: Multi-element and rare earth element composition of lichens, mosses, and vascular plants from the Central Barrenlands, Nunavut, Canada. - Applied Geochemistry 16, 2: 245 - 270.
  3. Conkin, J. & R. T. Alisauskas, 2016: Conversion of tundra to exposed peat habitat by snow geese (Chen caerulescens caerulescens) and Ross’s geese (C. rossii) in the central Canadian Arctic. - Polar Biology : 10.1007/s00300-016-1979-x.

  4. Hudson, J. M. G. & G. H. R. Henry, 2010: High Arctic plant community resists 15 years of experimental warming. - Journal of Ecology 98, 5: 1035-1041.

  5. Kuc, M. & P. Budkewitsch, 2002: Eksperymentalne badania inicjalnych faz rozwojowych porostów naskalnych (Expedition Fiord, wyspa Axel Heiberg, Nunavut, Kanada) [Experimental investigations of the initial stages of development of epipetric lichens (Expedition Fiord, Axel Heiberg Island, Nunavut, Canada)]. - In: Kostrzewski, A/Rachlewicz, G (eds.): Funkcjonowanie i Monitoring Geoekosystemów Obszarów Polarnych. Polish Polar Studies, pp. 17-23.

  6. Sokoloff, P. C., 2015: The flora of Cunningham Inlet, Somerset Island, Nunavut: History, analysis, and new collections of vascular plants, mosses, lichens, and algae. - Canadian Field-Naturalist 129, 1: 24-37.
  7. St. Pierre, K. A., V. L. St. Louis, J. L. Kirk, I. Lehnherr, S. Wang, C. La Farge, 2015: Importance of open marine waters to the enrichment of total mercury and monomethylmercury in lichens in the canadian high arctic. - Environmental Science and Technology 49, 10: 5930–5938.