Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/21923
Título: Classification of the Mediterranean lowland to submontane pine forest vegetation
Autor: Bonari, Gianmaria
Fernández-González, Federico
Çoban, Süleyman
Monteiro-Henriques, Tiago
Bergmeier, Erwin
Didukh, Yakiv P.
Xystrakis, Fotios
Angiolini, Claudia
Chytrý, K.
Acosta, Alicia T.R.
Agrillo, E.
Costa, José Carlos
Danihelka, J.
Hennekens, S.M.
Kavgacı, A.
Knollová, I.
Neto, Carlos
Sağlam, C.
Škvorc, Z.
Tichý, L.
Chytrý, M.
Palavras-chave: biogeography
classification
expert system
forest
Mediterranean Basin
phytosociology
Pinetea halepensis
Pinus
Quercetea ilicis
vegetation classification
vegetation-plot database
Data: 2021
Editora: Wiley Online / International Association of Vegetation Science
Citação: Appl Veg Sci. 2021;24:e12544
Resumo: Aim: Vegetation types of Mediterranean thermophilous pine forests dominated by Pinus brutia, Pinus halepensis, Pinus pinaster and Pinus pinea were studied in various areas. However, a comprehensive formal vegetation classification of these forests based on a detailed data analysis has never been developed. Our aim is to provide the first broad-scale classification of these pine forests based on a large data set of vegetation plots. Location: Southern Europe, North Africa, Levant, Anatolia, Crimea and the Caucasus. Methods: We prepared a data set of European and Mediterranean pine forest vegetation plots. We selected 7,277 plots dominated by the cold-sensitive Mediterranean pine species Pinus brutia, Pinus halepensis, Pinus pinaster and Pinus pinea. We classified these plots using TWINSPAN, interpreted the ecologically and biogeographically homogeneous TWINSPAN clusters as alliances, and developed an expert system for automatic vegetation classification at the class, order and alliance levels. Results: We described Pinetea halepensis as a new class for the Mediterranean lowland to submontane pine forests, included in the existing Pinetalia halepensis order, and distinguished 12 alliances of native thermophilous pine forests, including four newly described and three informal groups merging supposedly native stands and old-established plantations. The main gradients in species composition reflect elevational vegetation belts and the west–east, and partly north–south, biogeographical differences. Both temperature and precipitation seasonality co-vary with these gradients. Conclusions: We provide the first formal classification at the order and alliance levels for all the Mediterranean thermophilous pine forests based on vegetation-plot data. This classification includes traditional syntaxa, which have been critically revised, and a new class and four new alliances. We also outline a methodological workflow that might be useful for other vegetation classification syntheses. The expert system, which is jointly based on pine dominance and species composition, is a tool for applying this classification in research and nature conservation survey, monitoring and management
Descrição: Vegetation Survey
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/21923
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12544
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