Grassland vegetation of the Molinio‐Arrhenatheretea class in the NW Balkan Peninsula
QUESTIONS: How does the floristic composition of plant species of meadows and mesic pastures vary along a broad geographical gradient in the NW Balkans? How does the current phytosociological classification of the Molinio‐Arrhenatheretea vegetation differ among the NW Balkan countries? LOCATION: NW...
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Published in: | Applied vegetation science Vol. 17; no. 3; pp. 591 - 603 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Lanna
Opulus Press
01-07-2014
Blackwell Publishing Ltd John Wiley & Sons Ltd Wiley Subscription Services, Inc |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | QUESTIONS: How does the floristic composition of plant species of meadows and mesic pastures vary along a broad geographical gradient in the NW Balkans? How does the current phytosociological classification of the Molinio‐Arrhenatheretea vegetation differ among the NW Balkan countries? LOCATION: NW Balkans (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia). METHODS: 3635 relevés originally assigned to the class Molinio‐Arrhenatheretea were classified with a beta flexible method, and the crispness of classification was checked. DCA ordination with Pignatti indicator values and climate data were applied to show the influence of site conditions on species composition. RESULTS: The classification was best interpreted at the level of 13 clusters, but could also be interpreted at the level of three groups of clusters. The first division was according to geography and climate: the first and third groups were concentrated in the NW part, while the second was restricted to the eastern part of the study area. The most important variable was site moisture, followed by nutrients and altitude, which corresponded with a west–east direction. The first group was very diverse and included communities on the wettest and most nutrient‐rich sites (Potentillion anserinae, Cynosurion cristati, Calthion palustris, Molinion caeruleae, Molinio‐Hordeion). The second group comprised mesophilous continental grasslands (Trifolio‐Ranunculion pedati, Trifolion pallidi, Trifolion resupinati), while the third group consisted of grasslands from regions with abundant precipitation (Arrhenatherion elatioris, Deschampsion cespitosae, Pancicion serbicae, Triseto flavescentis‐Polygonion bistortae). CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis can be used to unify different phytosociological classifications in different countries, also showing the transitional forms of well‐known Central European vegetation types that have a different floristic composition and ecology in the Balkans. This knowledge will enable classification of the same vegetation types in neighbouring Balkan countries that are less studied. |
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Bibliography: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12094 istex:AF0BC59201B2B052BCC5BE5E131100144111C0B7 ark:/67375/WNG-XKDT19CZ-L ARRS - No. P1-0236 ArticleID:AVSC12094 Appendix S1. Map of relevé distribution and precipitation of the warmest quarter as the climatic variable.Appendix S2. Syntaxonomic checklist of the Molinio-Arrhenatheretea class in the NW Balkans.Appendix S3. Full synoptic table in pdf and csv format. Ministry of Education and Science of Serbia - No. 31057; No. BI-RS/12-13-035; No. BI-HR/12-13-010 ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1402-2001 1654-109X |
DOI: | 10.1111/avsc.12094 |