Units are organized by the System and Class levels, and summary information is provided for all 82 units at the Ecological Community Group level. This information includes a concise statement of the group's concept; distribution within Virginia; environmental and site conditions; vegetation structure and general floristic attributes; threats; associated rare species; and an assessment of the rarity of included community types, if known and applicable. The term "globally rare" indicates that a community or species is rare throughout its range. Characterization of habitats, soil chemistry, vegetation, and floristics is based almost exclusively on plot and other data collected by DCR-DNH ecologists. Literature pertinent to a group is cited at the end of the description; full citations are provided in the Literature Cited and Additional References section. Definitions of many scientific and technical terms are provided in a Glossary of Technical Terms and Abbreviations.
One or two photos are provided in the overview, but in order to provide a more visually rich treatment, we now provide a link to a gallery of captioned photos for most groups. A user may click on any thumbnail in the gallery overview to access the large captioned images and scroll through them using the arrow buttons at the top. The photos are sized fairly large for detailed viewing and may be cut off at the bottom on small monitors. We recommend large desktop monitors and/or use of the "full screen" modes provided by most web browsers for optimal viewing. Clicking on a large, captioned photo in the gallery will open an even larger version of the image in a separate window.
An assessment of the status of classification efforts, a map of plot locations representing the ecological community group, as well as information on finer-scale community types that are nested within the the group, are provided under the heading "Representative Community Types." The latter consists of the Virginia state name for the community type, a link to the USNVC page for the type in NatureServe Explorer, and a downloadable Excel file containing compositional summary statistics for all types in the ecological group; the compositional statistics for each type are in separate worksheets, and a README file in the first worksheet explains the format. Most of the listed community types reflect the results of analysis of regional data sets, both within-state and for projects that included plot data from adjacent states (Fleming and Coulling 2001, Coulling 2002, Fleming 2002a, Patterson 2008, Taverna and Patterson 2008, NatureServe in prep, Fleming and Patterson 2009).
The scientific and common names of most community types are based on occurrences in Virginia and may not always match the Global Name in the U.S. National Vegetation Classification (USNVC). The scientific name (State Name) is based on Latin names of up to six dominant or characteristic plant species. Those species occurring in the same stratum are separated by a hyphen ( - ); those occurring in different strata are separated by a slash ( / ). Species found less consistently in all occurrences of a community type, are placed in parentheses. Subspecies and varieties of nominal species are not included in community names unless they are explicitly diagnostic.
Synonymy with the USNVC is indicated, followed by the USNVC Global Element code; in some cases, this synonymy may be uncertain, approximate, or lacking. Where possible, hyperlinks are provided to the descriptions of the USNVC global types in NatureServe Explorer. Note that neither provisional types nor modified and ruderal types (ranked GNA) are included in NatureServe Explorer's treatment of ecological communities.
Community type names with the parenthetical modifier "PROVISIONAL" should be considered tentative. In most cases, these putative types are based on limited data and analysis, and are subject to reinterpretation or changes in concept as additional data become available.
Global conservation ranks reflect those in the NatureServe database and state ranks were assigned by DCR-DNH ecologists. Note that the status of many community types is poorly or imperfectly known and that many ranks are indefinite (see GNR, GU and SU below) or subject to change as more information becomes available.
Global Conservation Ranks
The Nature Conservancy, NatureServe, and all state Natural Heritage programs use the following system for ranking the range-wide conservation status of vegetation types at the association level. Intermediate ranks (e.g., G3G4) may also be used. A question mark added to a rank expresses an uncertainty about the rank in the range of one either way on the 1-5 scale. For example a G2? rank indicates that the rank is thought to be a G2, but could be a G1 or a G3. A "Q" added to a rank denotes questionable taxonomy. It modifies the degree of imperilment and is only used in cases where the type would have a less imperiled rank if it were not recognized as a valid type (i.e., if it were combined with a more common type).
State Conservation Ranks
DCR-DNH ecologists employ a similar system for ranking the state-wide status of community types. Intermediate ranks (e.g., S3S4) may also be used.
With very few exceptions, botanical nomenclature follows The Flora of Virginia (Weakley, Ludwig, Townsend, and Fleming 2020); Click here to download a standard list of this flora in Excel format. In the ecological group descriptions, pertinent subspecific taxa are identified to the extent possible. However, many varieties and subspecies intergrade extensively in Virginia or have within-state distributions that are poorly understood. As a result, some subspecific taxa are not recognized in this document even though they are included in the Flora of Virginia. Photographs of more than 950 plant and animal species referenced in the text may be viewed by clicking the highlighted species names.
For treatments of Virginia physiography and biogeography, as well as a map depicting the state's major provincial divisions, see the Overview of the Physiography and Vegetation of Virginia section of this website. Click on the physiographic relief map below to open a larger image in a separate window.
Physiographic/biogeographic regions of Virginia used for element tracking and mapping by DCR-DNH: AM = Allegheny Mountains. CM = Cumberland Mountains. NC = Northern Coastal Plain. NB = Northern Blue Ridge. NP = Northern Piedmont. OC = Outer Coastal Plain. RV = Ridge and Valley. SC = Southern Coastal Plain. SP = Southern Piedmont. SB = Southern Blue Ridge.
The counties and major incorporated cities of Virginia. Click on the counties map to open a larger image in a separate window.