4.5 Article

Geographical and ecological differentiation in Greek Fagus forest vegetation

Journal

JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 743-750

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2007.tb02589.x

Keywords

Balkan; beech; classification; gradient analysis; phytosociology

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Question: Which are the gradients of floristic differentiation in Greek beech ( Fagus sylvatica) forests? Which is the role of geographical and ecological factors in this differentiation? Location: Beech forests of the plant geographical regions Northeast, North Central and East Central Greece. Methods: A total of 1404 published and unpublished phytosociological releves were used in the analyses. TWINSPAN and DCA were applied to classify and ordinate the releves. Altitude, Indicator Values of releves and their X and Y coordinates were used in a posteriori interpretation of the ordination axes. Kendall ' s correlation coeffcients were calculated between DCA releve scores and explanatory variables. Multiple linear regression was used to partition the variation explained by the. rst two DCA axes, between the geographical and the ecological variables. Results: Classiffication resulted in 14 vegetation units defined by species composition. Two types of gradients, ecological and geographical, were revealed by the DCA of all releves. The partition of the variation accounted for by the. rst and second DCA axis was attributed mainly to ecological and geographical variables, respectively. Conclusions: Beech forests of northeast and Central Greece show phytogeographical differences, while ecologically similar vegetation units occur in both regions. A west-east gradient is revealed in Greek beech forest vegetation. The extent of the study area, its position along regional gradients and the comprehensiveness of the data set that is analysed determine the types of the gradients which can be revealed in a vegetation study.

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