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Keywords = Dicrano-Pinion sylvestris

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26 pages, 10877 KiB  
Article
Phytosociological Analysis of the Boreal Oligotrophic Pine Forests in the Southern Ural Region (Russia)
by Vasiliy Martynenko, Pavel Shirokikh, Elvira Baisheva, Albert Muldashev, Nikolay Fedorov, Svetlana Zhigunova and Leniza Naumova
Forests 2024, 15(8), 1461; https://doi.org/10.3390/f15081461 - 20 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1244
Abstract
Floristic composition and syntaxonomy of the boreal oligotrophic pine forests covering vast areas in the boreal, hemiboreal, and temperate zones of continental Eurasia still remain poorly studied in the Southern Ural region. Using the Braun–Blanquet approach and TURBOVEG and JUICE software, the phytocoenotic [...] Read more.
Floristic composition and syntaxonomy of the boreal oligotrophic pine forests covering vast areas in the boreal, hemiboreal, and temperate zones of continental Eurasia still remain poorly studied in the Southern Ural region. Using the Braun–Blanquet approach and TURBOVEG and JUICE software, the phytocoenotic diversity of boreal oligotrophic pine forests of the Southern Ural region was studied, and their position in the system of ecological and floristic classification of Eurasian vegetation was determined. Geobotanical data on boreal oligotrophic pine forests of Europe, including the European part of Russia; the Southern Urals; and Siberia were compared. A new alliance of oligotrophic boreal pine forests Brachypodio pinnati-Pinion sylvestris all. nov. hoc loco is described. The communities of this new alliance (i.e., five associations from the Southern Ural region) are characterized by a special floristic composition, occupying an intermediate position between the typical European oligotrophic pine forests of the alliance Dicrano-Pinion (Libbert 1933) Matuszkiewicz 1962 and oligotrophic (mainly psammophilous) South Siberian pine forests of the alliance Hieracio-Pinion Anenkhonov et Chytrý 1998. The communities of the alliance Brachypodio pinnati-Pinion sylvestris prefer to grow on poor soils with different moisture conditions. Due to intensive forestry activities, the distribution area of these forests has decreased, and these communities have been replaced by secondary birch forests. We have proposed a set of conservation measures to preserve these communities. A new association of oligotrophic pine forests Psephello sumensis-Pinetum sylvestris ass. nov. hoc loco is also described. These communities from the Kurgan region of Western Siberia were ordered into the alliance Dicrano-Pinion. It confirms the idea that the distribution area of this alliance may reach Siberia. Unlike the Southern Ural pine forests of the alliance Brachypodio pinnati-Pinion sylvestris, the recovery of these West Siberian pine forests after felling is quite high, and these communities do not require special measures for their protection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forest Biodiversity Conservation)
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23 pages, 2690 KiB  
Article
Phytosociological Analysis of Natural and Artificial Pine Forests of the Class Vaccinio-Piceetea Br.-Bl. in Br.-Bl. et al. 1939 in the Sudetes and Their Foreland (Bohemian Massif, Central Europe)
by Kamila Reczyńska, Paweł Pech and Krzysztof Świerkosz
Forests 2021, 12(1), 98; https://doi.org/10.3390/f12010098 - 18 Jan 2021
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 3100
Abstract
Research Highlights: Differentiation of Scots pine forests of the class Vaccinio-Piceetea in Poland has been the subject of numerous studies, including revisions. Despite that, the area of southwestern Poland was hitherto practically unexplored in this respect. Background and Objectives: The aim of this [...] Read more.
Research Highlights: Differentiation of Scots pine forests of the class Vaccinio-Piceetea in Poland has been the subject of numerous studies, including revisions. Despite that, the area of southwestern Poland was hitherto practically unexplored in this respect. Background and Objectives: The aim of this work was therefore (i) to present the diversity of the pine forests in the Sudetes and their foreland; (ii) to compare the ecology of studied communities. Materials and Methods: We analyzed 175 phytosociological relevés collected between 1991 and 2020 in natural and anthropogenic pine stands. To identify vegetation types, we used the modified TWINSPAN algorithm; principal coordinate analysis, distance-based redundancy analysis and permutational tests were applied to identify the variation explained and the main environmental gradients shaping the studied plant communities. Results: Five associations were distinguished: thermophilous Asplenio cuneifolii-Pinetum sylvestris Pišta ex Husová in Husová et al. 2002, which develops on shallow soils over ultrabasic substrates, Hieracio pallidi-Pinetum sylvestris Stöcker 1965, which prefers outcrops of acidic rocks; Betulo carpaticae-Pinetum sylvestris Mikyška 1970, which is relict in origin and occurs on the upper Cretaceous sandstones, the peatland pine–birch forests of the Vaccinio uliginosi-Betuletum pubescentis Libbert 1933 and the Vaccinio myrtilli-Pinetum sylvestris Juraszek 1928. Moreover, community Brachypodium sylvaticum-Pinus sylvestris with the occurrence of many thermophilous and basiphilous species was also found on limestone substratum. The analysis of the species composition of pine plantations established on deciduous and mixed forests habitats revealed that these anthropogenic communities were marked by a random combination of species in which a certain group of common forest generalists participated. The distinguished communities differed clearly among each other also in habitat characteristics. Particularly important for their differentiation were soil reaction and nutrients, supported by differences in moisture, temperature and light availability. Apart from the edaphic factors, altitude and the bedrock type proved to be equally important. Conclusions: Our study provides new remarks to the typology and synecology of pine forest communities in SW Poland. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Ecology and Management)
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