Detailed Information on Publication Record
2004
Environmental factors and Carpathian spring fen vegetation: the importance of scale and temporal variation
HÁJKOVÁ, Petra, Petr WOLF and Michal HÁJEKBasic information
Original name
Environmental factors and Carpathian spring fen vegetation: the importance of scale and temporal variation
Authors
HÁJKOVÁ, Petra (203 Czech Republic, guarantor), Petr WOLF (203 Czech Republic) and Michal HÁJEK (203 Czech Republic)
Edition
Annales Botanici Fennici, Helsinki, Finnish Zoological and Botanical Publishing Board, 2004, 0003-3847
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher
Finland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Impact factor
Impact factor: 0.494
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/04:00028905
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
UT WoS
000224080100002
Keywords in English
conductivity; ecology; mire; pH; poor-rich gradient; seasonal patterns; spatial scale; water chemistry; water level
Tags
Změněno: 29/6/2009 13:59, prof. Mgr. Michal Hájek, Ph.D.
Abstract
V originále
The importance of scale and temporal variation in measured environmental factors is often underestimated in searching for vegetationenvironmental correlations in mires. Since different ecological processes can be dominant at different spatial scales, we compared species distribution patterns along environmental gradients in Carpathian spring fens at two scales: among and within vegetation types. At the large scale, four distinct vegetation types along the poorrich fen gradient were identified: poor Sphagnum fen, moderate-rich fen, extreme-rich tufa-forming fen and rich fen meadow. The results confirm that environmental factors related to water and soil mineral concentrations determine fen vegetation composition at a large spatial scale. The crucial role of base saturation for large-scale variation in mire vegetation is not always evident at a smaller spatial scale. At a within-vegetation-type scale, we found a clear pattern in water level variation which was significantly related to vegetation composition. Organic matter was detected to be the most important factor for explaining variation in rich-fen meadow vegetation. Further, periodical measurements of water level and physical-chemical properties of water (i.e. pH, conductivity, redox potential, and temperature) permitted the role of their temporal variation among vegetation types along the poorrich fen gradient to be assessed. Water pH was the most stable variable in all vegetation types, while conductivity was more stable in the rich than in the poor and moderate-rich fens. Water temperature showed the smallest fluctuation in the extreme-rich fen. In poor and moderate-rich fens, water temperature exhibited smaller temporal variation than did conductivity. Poor and moderate-rich fens generally exhibited a lower mean water level as compared with extreme-rich habitats. Independently of vegetation type, water level decline was associated with an increase in conductivity and temperature and a parallel decrease in redox-potential. Water pH remained unchanged during water level fluctuation
Links
GA206/02/0568, research and development project |
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MSM 143100010, plan (intention) |
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