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Carex nemoralis is a plant species in the Cyperaceae (sedge) family. [2] [3] It was first described in 1994 as Uncinia nemoralis by the Australian botanist Karen Wilson [2] [4], and was transferred to the genus, Carex, in 2015 by the Global Carex Group.
In general nemoral means "pertaining to groves or woodland".Its origin is related to the Latin word "nemus" (stem: "nemor-"), meaning a grove of trees.[1]It is especially used to label a type of biome (vegetation zone), which is in the temperate zone of Eurasia and has broad-leaved forests. [2]
The grove snail, brown-lipped snail or lemon snail (Cepaea nemoralis) is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusc. [3]It is one of the most common large species of land snail in Europe, and has been introduced to North America.
A hemiboreal forest has some characteristics of a boreal forest to the north, and also shares features with temperate-zone forests to the south. A significant number of nut species, such as aspens, oaks, maples, ash trees, birches, beeches, hazels, and hornbeams, can be found here.
Gymnosporia nemorosa is a spiny, somewhat sprawling evergreen shrub or small tree with drooping branches growing to some 5 m tall and found along forest edges in Mpumalanga, Eswatini, KwaZulu-Natal south to the Garden Route in the Southern Cape.
Trees play a significant role in reducing erosion and moderating the climate. They remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store large quantities of carbon in their tissues. Trees and forests provide a habitat for many species of animals and plants. Tropical rainforests are among the most biodiverse habitats in the world.
Dryopteris carthusiana is a perennial species of fern native to damp forests throughout the Holarctic Kingdom.It is known as the narrow buckler-fern in the United Kingdom, [2] and as the spinulose woodfern in North America.
Their Southern mixed forest rivers group in southeast Finland has short, low-gradient streams in mixed coniferous forest, connecting many clear or humic lakes, ponds, peat bogs and wetlands, which overlap the boreo-nemoral zone.