“…(Rolland and Schueller, 1995), but seven stands have been reported to grow at abnormally low elevations within a mountain belt of the Rhone Alpes and at altitudes comprised between 1100 and 1500 m a.s.l. The existence of these exceptional stands in the Devoluy (Combe Obscure; Bertinelli et al, 1993; Bois du Sappey; Cécillon et al, 2010) and Grande Chartreuse (La Plagne cirque; Cassagne et al, 2008) massifs was associated with the circulation of cold air in scree slopes, which may locally create periglacial pedoclimatic conditions (Cécillon et al, 2010). The microclimate of cold scree slopes allows for exceptional microhabitats to develop with very thick and raw humus (Cassagne et al, 2008), forming ideal niches for various cold living plants (Bertinelli et al, 1993) and periglacial relict species of non-vascular plants (Asta et al, 2001), beetles (Molenda, 1996), spiders and mites (Zacharda et al, 2005).…”