Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (15)
Language
- English (15) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (15)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (15)
Keywords
- syntaxonomy (15) (remove)
New vegetation data of dry grasslands in the Western Carpathians and the northern Pannonian Basin
(2010)
The paper presents new vegetation data from dry grassland sites in the biogeographical regions of the Western Carpathians and the northern Pannonian Basin, mainly belonging to the alliances Bromo pannonici-Festucion pallentis and Festucion valesiacae (Festuco-Brometea). The 124 phytosociological relevés were sampled between 2005 and 2009 in Slovakia, the SE Czech Republic, NE Austria, and N Hungary. They are classified into 16 associations and four transitional vegetation types. The paper also brings new information on the distribution of grassland associations in the study area. A new locality of the rare association Teucrio botryos-Andropogonetum ischaemi was confirmed. During our recent investigation of historical sites of the Alopecuro pratensis-Festucetum pseudovinae (Cynosurion cristati, Molinio-Arrhenatheretea) in the Slaná river floodplain, only one occurrence could be confirmed. Geographical principles in distribution of dry grassland associations and classification of the Stipa pulcherrima-dominated stands are also discussed.
This paper presents the results of a study on psammophilous grasslands, conducted during the years 1994-1997 and in 2008 in the Masurian Lake District (NE Poland). The study aimed at the determination of floristic composition, phytosociological diversity and habitat characteristics. Field work resulted in 511 phytosociological releves. Soil samples were taken to determine pH, hydrolytic acidity, sum of basic cations, cation exchange capacity, content of CaC03 and total carbon. In 2008, the presence of communities dominated by grey-hair grass (Corynephorus canescens) in the previously established sites was checked. TWINSPAN was used for hierarchic classification of the association Comiculario aculeatae-Corynephoretum canescentis (syn. Spergulo morisonii-Corynephoretum canescentis). Accordingly, the association is divided into four subtypes (typical subtype, subtype with Cladonia mitis, subtype with Thymus serpyllum and subtype with Festuca ovina) with nine variants. Field observations showed that the communities analyzed have been under strong anthropogenic pressure, causing their degeneration and decrease in area. The most common human uses of psammophilous grassland communities are housing development, road construction, afforestation, sand extraction, wood storage and unauthorized dumping. In contrast to the above types of land use, seasonal use of grasslands for recreation purposes (as sunbathing spots or as sports fields) does not lead to their degeneration and may have a beneficial influence on their maintenance as a component of the local landscape.
The grey dunes along the present-day depositional coasts of Latvia are among the most diverse dune ecosystems in the Baltic Sea region. This paper focuses on the grey dune plant communities, their classification based on the Braun-Blanquet approach and their ecology and distribution in Latvia. A total of 3,430 phytosociological relevés were sampled in all coastal sections in the period from 1994 to 2008. The vegetation was classified using TWINSPAN analysis. Diagnostic species were determined for each syn taxon using statistical measures of fidelity (phi coefficient and Fishers exact test). The phytogeography of associations and variants is described on the basis of a distribution range analysis of plant species. In total, three associations of the class Koelerio-Corynephoretea occur in the grey dunes. The Corniculario aculeatae-Corynephoretum canescentis and the Caricetum arenariae belong to the alliance Corynephorion canescentis and the order Corynephoretalia canescentis. The Festucetum polesicae belongs to the alliance Koelerion glaucae in the order Sedo acris-Festucetalia. With six variants, it is the phytosociologically most diverse association of the grey dunes: typical variant, variant of Gypsophila paniculata, variant of Koeleria glauca, variant of Thymus serpyllum, variant of Epipactis atrorubens and variant of Corynephorus canescens.
Our results show phytosociological differences among five coastal sections due to geomorphology and coastal processes. The most diverse grey dune plant communities occur on the open Baltic Sea coast where all three associations are represented. The most common vegetation type on all coastal sections in Latvia is the typical variant of the Festucetum polesicae. The Epipactis atrorubens variant of this association is widely distributed, too. It has its major occurrences along the Gulf of Riga and the Irbe Strait. The Corniculario aculeatae-Corynephoretum canescentis was found in only two locations. Stands of the Festucetum polesicae var. Koeleria glauca occupy wider areas on old dunes, while the Festucetum polesicae var. Gypsophila paniculata is more typical on young dynamic dunes with intensive sand drift. The results of the phytogeographical analysis of vegetation data show that under the influence of climate, especially with dominance of the oceanic and transformed oceanic air masses, grey dune plant communities on the Latvian coast are mainly sub-oceanic to sub-continental. The most continental community is the Festucetum polesicae var. Koeleria glauca, while the Caricetum arenariae and the Corniculario aculeatae- Corynephoretum canescentis have the strongest oceanic character.
We studied the dry grasslands of shallow, skeletal soils (Sedo-Scleranthenea, Koelerio-Corynephoretea) in northern Europe, based on a combination of new relevés from southern Oland (Sweden, n = 182) and Saaremaa (Estonia, n = 73) as well as a comprehensive evaluation of literature data, of which 65 suitable relevés were directly included in our analyses. Apart from a few vague indications of acidophytic Sedo-Scleranthenea communities (order Sedo-Scleranthetalia), all data refer to basiphytic communities (Alysso-Sedetalia); our analyses are thus focussed on the latter. The Nordic Alysso-Sedetalia communities proved to be quite different from their temperate counterparts and thus are included in a separate alliance, Tortello tortuosae-Sedion albi, which forms the northern counterpart to the central European Alysso-Sedion. Within the northern alliance, we distinguish two suballiances. The more widespread central suballiance Tortello tortuosae-Sedenion albi inhabits different types of base-rich substrata in both natural and anthropogenic sites, and is comprised of the Cladonio symphicarpiae-Sedetum albi and the Ditricho flexicaulis-Sedetum acris. The second suballiance Tortello rigentis-Helianthemenion oelandici is restricted to the alvar sites (= treeless limestone plateaus) in Oland, Gotland, Västergötland and Estonia. It is characterised by several endemic taxa and a large number of cryptogams typical of alvar. It is comprised of four associations, Crepido pumilae-Allietum alvarensis, Fulgensio bracteatae-Poetum alpinae, Helianthemo oelandici-Galietum oelandici and Gypsophilo fastigiatae-Globularietum vulgaris. All six Nordic associations are described in detail with respect to their floristic composition, ecology, distribution and lower-ranked units, and each is represented by a vegetation table. The floristic differences within the Nordic communities are worked out in a synoptic table. Whereas several vegetation scientists have pointed out that vegetation types occurring at the limits of their distribution ranges in northern Europe are generally difficult to classify, our application of the Braun-Blanquet approach, which is based on a priori separated structural types and the general application of the central syntaxon concept, has enabled us to characterise and adequately define all Nordic communities. The Tortello-Sedion associations are two to three times as species-rich as those of the Alysso-Sedion and are among the most diverse small-scale plant communities ever described. We discuss the reasons for this exceptionally high plant diversity and the peculiar species mixture in the Tortello-Sedion and compare the relationship between Alysso-Sedion and Tortello-Sedion to the situation of other Nordic syntaxa of predominantly temperate vegetation types. Our results further underline the uniqueness of Baltic alvars and their paramount importance for conservation at the European level.
During the last decade, three new acidophilous forests associations were detected in the Mecsek Mts (SW Hungary), and described as acidophilous beech wood (Sorbo torminalis-Fagetum (A. O. Horvat 1963a) Borhidi et Kevey in Kevey 2001), acido-mesophilous oak wood (Luzulo forsteri-Quercetum petraeae (A. O. Horvat 1963a) Borhidi et Kevey 1996) and acido-xerophilous oak shrubland (Genisto pilosae-Quercetum polycarpae (A. O. Horvat 1967) Borhidi et Kevey 1996). In this article two further new associations are described: the acidophilous oakwood of the Mecsek (Viscario-Quercetum polycarpae Kevey, ass. nova) and the acido-mesophilous oakwood of western Hungary (Campanulo rotundifoliae-Quercetum petraeae (Csapody 1964) Kevey, ass. nova). These associations are related to the acidophilous forests of the Balkan Peninsula based on the infrequent presence of sub-Mediterranean species. A detailed comparative study of these new associations with the earlier known ones permitted to develop a reshaped classification of the syntaxonomy of these units, creating four new suballiances: within the frame of Quercion farnetto I. Horvat 1938 the suballiances Luzulo forsteri-Quercenion polycarpae Kevey, suball. nova and the typical Quercenion farnetto Kevey, suball. nova, in the frame of Quercion petraeae Zolyomi et Jakucs 1957 the suballiances Luzulo multiflorae-Quercenion petraeae Kevey, suball. nova and the Quercenion petraeae Kevey, suball. nova.