More info for the terms:
hardwood,
permafrost,
tundraArctic brome occurs on moist to dry sites. It is found in woods [
9],
meadows, and on grassy slopes [
14,
15]. In interior Alaska it occurs on
warm, dry sites on steep, south-facing slopes in young mixed hardwood
and white spruce (Picea glauca) stands [
33]. In Michigan it grows on
sandy shores and dunes at the northern edge of Lake Michigan [
31]. In
western Montana it occurs in moist montane or subalpine meadows [
20,
22].
In Colorado it is found on dry rocky slopes [
14].
Arctic brome grows on a variety of soil types. It occurs on gravelly
sandy clay loam on arctic alluvial fan tundra in the central Brooks
Range [
8]. It is found on rocky, shallow, poorly developed soil on
bluffs in the upper Yukon valley in east-central Alaska [
10]. It occurs
on deep, well-drained mineral loess soils that are rich in organics and
are underlain by permafrost on pingos near Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. Pingo
permafrost thaws more deeply in summer than that of surrounding land
[
32]. Arctic brome grows on marine deltas and eroding sandy seashores
of Amundsen Gulf [
7]. It occurs on shallow, well-drained sandy loam
soil on a wind-disturbed butte top in southeastern Montana [
25] and on
sandy loam on the Palliser winter range in Banff National Park, Alberta
[
26].
Arctic brome occurs on soils with pH 7.0 to 8.0 in north-central
Alaska. These soils are wind-deposited from calcareous sediments [
32].
It was grown successfully on silty loam soil with pH 6.2 near Palmer,
Alaska [
23].
In the Rocky Mountains arctic brome is abundant up to about 11,000
feet (3,353 m) elevation, depending on latitude and other conditions
[
15]. In Banff National Park it occurs from 6,204 to 7,205 feet
(1,891-2,196 m). It was found at 3,700 feet (1,128 m) in northwestern
Montana [
20]. In east-central Alaska it was recorded at 2,297 feet (700
m) elevation [
10], and in the Northwest Territories it was found at sea
level [
7].