Detailed Information on Publication Record
1998
Potential replacement vegetation: an approach to vegetation mapping of cultural landscapes
CHYTRÝ, MilanBasic information
Original name
Potential replacement vegetation: an approach to vegetation mapping of cultural landscapes
Authors
CHYTRÝ, Milan (203 Czech Republic)
Edition
Applied Vegetation Science, Uppsala, Opulus Press, 1998, 1402-2001
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher
Sweden
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/98:00000706
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
UT WoS
000208471900003
Změněno: 24/9/2004 18:36, prof. RNDr. Milan Chytrý, Ph.D.
Abstract
V originále
The concept of mapping potential replacement vegetation (PRV) is proposed as a parallel to potential natural vegetation (PNV). Potential replacement vegetation (PRV) is an abstract and hypothetical vegetation which is in balance with climatic and soil factors currently affecting a given habitat, with environmental factors influencing the habitat from outside such as air pollution, and with an abstract anthropogenic influence (management) of given type, frequency and intensity. For every habitat, there is a series of possible PRV types corresponding to the different anthropogenic influences, e.g. grazing, mowing, trampling or planting cereals. The PRV concept is especially useful in large-scale mapping (scales > 1:25,000) of small areas where replacement vegetation is the focus of attention for managers and land-use planners, for example in nature reserves where the aim is conservation of replacement vegetation managed in a traditional way, or in restoration ecology where the concept may be used for defining restoration goals and evaluating the success of restoration efforts. At smaller scales, the PRV may be useful for revealing the biogeographical patterns of larger areas which may be different from the corresponding PNV patterns, because replacement vegetation and natural vegetation may respond to environmental gradients at different scales. An example of the medium-scale PRV mapping by coincidence of diagnostic species of vegetation types, based on species distribution grid data, is presented. In cultural landscapes, the advantage of the PRV over the PNV is its direct relationship to the replacement vegetation. In the habitat mapping with respect to the replacement vegetation, the PRV concept yields more valuable results than the mapping of actual vegetation, as the latter is strongly affected by spatially variable anthropogenic influence which may largely be independent from the climatic and soil factors.
Links
GA206/96/0131, research and development project |
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