J 2023

Classification of European oak-hornbeam forests and related vegetation types

NOVÁK, Pavel, Wolfgang WILLNER, Idoia BIURRUN, Hamid GHOLIZADEH, Thilo HEINKEN et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Classification of European oak-hornbeam forests and related vegetation types

Authors

NOVÁK, Pavel (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Wolfgang WILLNER, Idoia BIURRUN, Hamid GHOLIZADEH, Thilo HEINKEN, Ute JANDT, Jozef KOLLÁR, Maria KOZHEVNIKOVA, Alireza NAQINEZHAD, Viktor ONYSHCHENKO, Remigiusz PIELECH, Valerijus RAŠOMAVIČIUS, Pavel SHIROKIKH, Kiril VASSILEV, Thomas WOHLGEMUTH, Martin VEČEŘA (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution) and Milan CHYTRÝ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution)

Edition

Applied Vegetation Science, Hoboken, Wiley, 2023, 1402-2001

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

10611 Plant sciences, botany

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 2.800 in 2022

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/23:00134093

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

000946286800001

Keywords in English

biogeography; Carpinetalia betuli; Europe; expert system; habitat; oak-hornbeam forest; phytosociology; syntaxonomy; vegetation classification; vegetation-plot database

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 20/6/2023 15:57, Mgr. Marie Šípková, DiS.

Abstract

V originále

Aims: Oak-hornbeam forests and related vegetation types (phytosociological order Carpinetalia betuli) are widespread in temperate western Eurasia. However, their national classification systems are poorly compatible, and a broad-scale classification based on numerical analyses is lacking. Therefore, we aimed to establish a unified formalized classification system based on a large data set of vegetation plots covering the entire range of these forests. Location: Europe, Anatolia, Caucasus and northern Iran. Methods: We compiled a data set of 15,817 vegetation plots from the European Vegetation Archive and the Hyrcanian Forest Vegetation Database, using the formal definition of the EUNIS habitat type T1E Carpinus and Quercus mesic deciduous forest. We classified the data set using TWINSPAN. Biogeographically and ecologically similar plot clusters were merged into oak-hornbeam forest types, which were interpreted as alliances. We also developed expert systems for automatically classifying vegetation at the alliance level for both the EuroVegChecklist (EVC) system and the revised classification. In addition, we calculated ordinations to show the major gradients in the species composition of the data set. Results: We present a revised classification system of the order Carpinetalia betuli with nine alliances, including basic descriptions of their species composition, distribution, ecology and syntaxonomy. The analyses largely supported the biogeographic concept of classification, analogous to EVC. Compared to EVC, we recognized an additional alliance Physospermo verticillati-Quercion cerridis (southern Italy) but found no support for the alliances Astrantio-Carpinion, Erythronio-Carpinion and Scillo-Quercion. The greatest difference in species composition was found between the southern and northern-northeastern Carpinetalia types. Expert systems for the revised classification system (similar to 89% of plots classified) and the EVC system (similar to 72%) are also included. Conclusions: We provide the first comprehensive overview of alliances of the order Carpinetalia betuli across its whole distribution range. The associated expert systems allow consistent application of the classification of these forests in nature conservation, habitat monitoring, and biodiversity and ecological research.

Links

GX19-28491X, research and development project
Name: Centrum pro evropské vegetační syntézy (CEVS) (Acronym: CEVS)
Investor: Czech Science Foundation