Borek said:
That's what I have seen in July, but if you have seen BBC's Planet Earth it talked about coniferous trees growing far north and it was even illustrated with a nice shot of forest that ended and was replaced by tundra. Movie was just confirming what I thought to be the reality for over 30 years...
One should be careful about generalisations in biology. Plants often have specialisations to particular physiological limits, so that one finds a particular species growing at a given temperature plus or minus say 10C, and surviving say 5C above or below those limits. But exactly which families or even orders they might be in may depend on the evolutionary history and lots and lots of hand-waving. Pines eg grow far north, but, as you point out, not all the way, and
not all species! One also get them all the way to the equator, but again,
not all species! In fact, some conifers that do fine in a warm country can't take cold, and vice very much versa. Many simply stop growing around say 20-25C. Some barely start growing at nearly those temperatures.
As for the angiosperms such as birches, what else is new? There are all sorts of phorbs growing in the tundra, right? Why should birches be excluded? And some of the phorbs are perennial, right? In fact, a vivid hint is the fact that Betula nana (that on the tundra seldom grows anything like 1m high) is evergreen! It can't afford to regenerate its leaves every season.
But why bother with wimps like birches? Try this site:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salix_arctica
I quote: "Despite its small size, it is a long-lived plant, growing extremely slowly in the severe Arctic climate; one in eastern Greenland was found to be 236 years old."
That small size is cm rather than m high. Such organisms leave me with a sense of uncanniness. And again:
"The Arctic Willow is a food source for several Arctic animals. Muskox, caribou, Arctic Hare and lemmings all feed on the bark and twigs while the buds are the main food source of the ptarmigan.
Both the Inuit and the Gwich’in make use of the Arctic Willow. Twigs would be used as fuel, while the decayed flowers (Suputiit) could be mixed with moss and used as wicking in the kudlik."
"A sense of uncanniness"? Should I add: "A sense of humility" ... "tenderness"...?