Illustrations of the book: Flora i rastitelnost Elizarovskogo gosudarstvennogo zakaznika (nizhnyaya Ob) / G.S.Taran, N.V.Sedelnikova, O.Yu.Pisarenko, V.V.Golomolzin. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 2004. 212 p. ISBN 5-02-032081-1. (in Russian)
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Flora and vegetation of Elizarovskiy state reserve (lower Ob river) / G.S.Taran, N.V.Sedelnikova, O.Yu.Pisarenko, V.V.Golomolzin. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 2004. 212 p. ISBN 5-02-032081-1. (in Russian)

G.S.Taran. These images for personal use only.

Photo on the book front cover: Birch forest with abundance of shrubs and herbs (ass. Anemonidio dichotomi-Betuletum pendulae Taran 1998) between the Syrkovaya Layda and Nizhnee Ozero lakes.

Photo 1. Duckweed community (ass. Lemnetum minoris) in the Malaya Korolyova channel.
Photo 2. Amphibious yellowcress (Rorippa amphibia) on the bank of the Bolshaya Bogdashinskaya channel.
Photo 3. Swampy purple reedgrass meadow (ass. Calamagrostietum purpureae Taran 1995, releve 202 NB).
Photo 4. Mature osier community (ass. Salicetum triandro-viminalis Lohm. 1952) near the Syrkovaya Layda lake.
Photo 5. Furcular anemone (Anemonidium dichotomum), one of the dominants of wet floodplain meadows.
Photo 6. Marsh calla (Calla palustris), one of the dominants of lakeside floating fens.
Photo 7. White willow (Salix alba) trees with roots grown at the time of the protracted flood.
Photo 8. Lakeside tussock white birch bog (ass. Carici juncellae-Betuletum pubescentis Taran 2000, releve 157 GT).
Photo 9. Birch forest with abundance of shrubs, rough horse-tail and herbs (ass. Crataego sanguineae-Populetum tremulae Taran 2000) near the Malaya Korolyova channel.
Photo 10. Aspen forest with abundance of shrubs and rough horse-tail (ass. Crataego sanguineae-Populetum tremulae Taran 2000) near the Malaya Korolyova channel.
Photo 11. Grey alder (Alnus incana) forest near the Nizhnyaya Layda channel (releve 216 GT).
Photo 12. View along the Malaya Korolyova channel.
Photo 13. Swampy narrow among floodplain ridges on the western bank of the Bolshaya Bogdashinskaya channel.
Photo 14. Lakeside depression with grass fens and tussock white birch bogs (the Elizarovskaya Sogra area).
Photo 15. Tall sedge fens with clumps of bog willows near the Syrkovaya Layda lake.
Photo 16. Moss grass (Coleanthus subtilis), floodplain ephemeral species included into the Red Book of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Region.

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