6533b873fe1ef96bd12d527b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Braun-Blanquet project: evaluating and characterizing European vegetation alliances

B Jiménez AlfaroM ChytrýS HennekensI KnollováJ SchaminéeAgrillo EN AlessiI Greve AlsosI ApostolovaF AttorreG AustrheimE BergmeierI BiurrunH BrisseJ BrunetL CarlónA ČArniJ CsikyJ DanihelkaE De BieM De CáceresJ DenglerY DidukhP DimopoulosR EjrnaesF Fernández GonzálezÚ FitzpatrickX FontV GolubJ­a GrytnesA IndreicaU JandtF JansenZ KąckiD KrstonošićF LanducciJ LenoirM LuotoT LysenkoV MartynenkoD MichalcováA NovakovskiyV OnyshchenkoMp Rodríguez RojoJ RodwellJ ŠIbíkU ŠIlcŽ ŠKvorcSorokin AZ StančićS Suárez ­SeoaneL TichýV VandvikR VenanzoniR VirtanenW WillnerS YamalovM. ZobelRiccardo Guarino

subject

Phytosociology Europe Alliances Vegetation biodiversity assessment natural habitatsSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicata

description

European tradition on vegetation classification provides an extraordinary legacy for understanding biodiversity. However, this classification lacks explicit data on vegetation attributes, especially if we extend national or regional concepts to a continental perspective. An additional effort for evaluating and characterizing European vegetation types is therefore needed, and the data contained in vegeta­ tion databases are probably the main tool for these purposes. The Braun­Blanquet project is an initiative of the European Vegetation Survey for characterizing veg­ etation alliances across Europe. By analyzing more than 500,000 vegetation plots from 22 European countries, we developed a framework consisting of: (1) evaluat­ ing the consistency and robustness of alliances using the information provided by vegetation plot databases, (2) calibrating assignment rules for classifying, at least partially, the plots not assigned to alliances and (3) characterizing vegeta­ tion types by providing lists of diagnostic species and major distributional pat­ terns. The Braun­Blanquet project represents the first attempt for extrapolating European vegetation information into a comprehensive definition of vegetation types. Furthermore, the outputs of the project are expected to improve biodiver­sity assessment and the conservation management of natural habitats. As a study case, we illustrate how our framework can be used to characterize different forest types across Europe.

http://hdl.handle.net/10447/94046