J 2007

Semi-dry grasslands along a climatic gradient across Central Europe: Vegetation classification with validation

ILLYÉS, Eszter, Milan CHYTRÝ, Zoltán BOTTA-DUKÁT, Ute JANDT, Monika JANIŠOVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Semi-dry grasslands along a climatic gradient across Central Europe: Vegetation classification with validation

Name in Czech

Semi-dry grasslands along a climatic gradient across Central Europe: Vegetation classification with validation

Authors

ILLYÉS, Eszter (348 Hungary), Milan CHYTRÝ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor), Zoltán BOTTA-DUKÁT (348 Hungary), Ute JANDT (276 Germany), Monika JANIŠOVÁ (703 Slovakia), Iveta ŠKODOVÁ (703 Slovakia), Wolfgang WILLNER (40 Austria) and Ondřej HÁJEK (203 Czech Republic)

Edition

Journal of Vegetation Science, Uppsala, Opulus Press, 2007, 1100-9233

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:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 2.251

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/07:00020869

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

000250089400008

Keywords in English

Austria; Bromion; Cirsio-Brachypodion; Czech Republic; Germany; Hungary; Phytosociology; Romania; Slovakia; Training and test data sets; Vegetation database

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 30/1/2008 18:23, prof. RNDr. Milan Chytrý, Ph.D.

Abstract

V originále

Question: What is the variation in species composition of Central European semi-dry grasslands? Can we apply a training-and-test validation approach for identifying phytosociological associations which are floristically well defined in a broad geographic comparison; can we separate them from earlier described associations with only a local validity? Location: A 1200 km long transect running along a gradient of increasing continentality from central Germany via Czech Republic, Slovakia, NE Austria, Hungary to NW Romania. Methods: Relevés with > 25% cover of Brachypodium pinnatum and/or Bromus erectus were geographically selected from a larger database. They were randomly split into two data sets, TRAINING and TEST, each with 422 relevés. Cluster analysis was performed for each data set on scores from significant principal coordinates. Different partitions of the TRAINING data set were validated on the TEST data set, using a new method based on the comparison of % frequencies of species occurrence in clusters. Clusters were characterized by statistically defined groups of diagnostic species and values of climatic variables. Results: Species composition changed along the NW-SE gradient and valid clusters were geographically well separated. Optimal partition level was at 11 clusters, six being valid: two clusters Germany and the Czech Republic corresponded to the Bromion erecti; two clusters from the Czech Republic and Hungary to the Cirsio-Brachypodion, and two clusters were transitional between these two alliances. Conclusion: The training-and-test validation method used in this paper proved to be efficient for discriminating between robust clusters, which are appropriate candidates for inclusion in the national or regional syntaxonomic overviews, and weak clusters, which are specific to the particular classification of the given data set.

In Czech

Byla popsána diverzita trávníků s dominancí druhů Brachypodium pinnatum a Bromus erectus ve střední Evropě. Současně byla testována nová metoda validace klasifikace vegetace vytvořené pomocí shlukové analýzy.

Links

GA206/05/0020, research and development project
Name: Vegetace České republiky: formalizovaná typizace, monografie a expertní systém
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, Vegetation of the Czech Republic: formalized typology, monograph and expert system
MSM0021622416, plan (intention)
Name: Diverzita biotických společenstev a populací: kauzální analýza variability v prostoru a čase
Investor: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the CR, Diversity of Biotic Communities and Populations: Causal Analysis of variation in space and time