Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{911670, author = {Chytrý, Milan and Danihelka, Jiří and Axmanová, Irena and Božková, Jana and Hettenbergerová, Eva and Li, ChingandFeng and Rozbrojová, Zuzana and Sekulová, Lucia and Tichý, Lubomír and Vymazalová, Marie and Zelený, David}, article_location = {Oxford}, article_number = {6}, keywords = {Annuals; Crete; Greece; Phrygana; Plant community; Soil chemistry; Species composition; Species pool; Species richness; Vegetation}, language = {eng}, issn = {1100-9233}, journal = {Journal of Vegetation Science}, title = {Floristic diversity of an eastern Mediterranean dwarf shrubland: the importance of soil pH}, url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1654-1103.2010.01212.x/abstract}, volume = {21}, year = {2010} }
TY - JOUR ID - 911670 AU - Chytrý, Milan - Danihelka, Jiří - Axmanová, Irena - Božková, Jana - Hettenbergerová, Eva - Li, Ching-Feng - Rozbrojová, Zuzana - Sekulová, Lucia - Tichý, Lubomír - Vymazalová, Marie - Zelený, David PY - 2010 TI - Floristic diversity of an eastern Mediterranean dwarf shrubland: the importance of soil pH JF - Journal of Vegetation Science VL - 21 IS - 6 SP - 1125-1137 EP - 1125-1137 PB - Wiley-Blackwell SN - 11009233 KW - Annuals KW - Crete KW - Greece KW - Phrygana KW - Plant community KW - Soil chemistry KW - Species composition KW - Species pool KW - Species richness KW - Vegetation UR - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1654-1103.2010.01212.x/abstract N2 - Questions: Does plant species richness and composition of eastern Mediterranean dwarf shrubland (phrygana) correlate with soil pH? How important is the effect of pH on species diversity in relation to other environmental factors in this ecosystem? What is the evolutionary background of the diversity-pH relationship? Location: Western Crete, Greece. Methods: Species composition of vascular plants, soil and other environmental variables were sampled in 100 m2 plots on acidic and basic bedrock in phrygana vegetation. The relationships between species composition and environmental variables (including climate) were tested using canonical correspondence analysis, and relationships between species richness and environment using correlation and regression analyses. Data were analysed separately for different plant functional types based on life form and life span. Results: Although soil pH varied across a narrow range (5.9-8.1), species composition changed significantly along the pH gradient within all plant functional types. For most functional types, the effect of soil pH on species composition was stronger than that of other environmental variables. Species richness of annuals, geophytes and suffruticose chamaephytes increased with soil pH, while richness of hemicryptophytes and shrubs was not correlated with pH. Conclusions: The results are consistent with the evolutionary species pool hypothesis. High numbers of calcicole annuals, geophytes and suffruticose chamaephytes may be a result of the evolution of these groups on base-rich dry soils in the Mediterranean climate. In contrast, hemicryptophytes, a life form typical of the temperate zone, evolved on both acidic and basic soils and therefore their species numbers do not respond to soil pH across the narrow range studied. The lack of a relationship between shrub species richness and pH is difficult to explain: it may reflect the more diverse or older origin of Mediterranean woody species and their conservative niches. ER -
CHYTRÝ, Milan, Jiří DANIHELKA, Irena AXMANOVÁ, Jana BOŽKOVÁ, Eva HETTENBERGEROVÁ, Ching-Feng LI, Zuzana ROZBROJOVÁ, Lucia SEKULOVÁ, Lubomír TICHÝ, Marie VYMAZALOVÁ a David ZELENÝ. Floristic diversity of an eastern Mediterranean dwarf shrubland: the importance of soil pH. \textit{Journal of Vegetation Science}. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010, roč.~21, č.~6, s.~1125-1137. ISSN~1100-9233.
|