81 research outputs found

    Ecological indicators applied to urban and suburban floras

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    Among the many approaches to ecological indicators, ecological indicators derived from the floristic composition of a site (i.e. Raunkiaer’s forms spectrum or the percentage of different geographical distribution types-chorotypes) are well established in botanical and ecological literature. Nonetheless their relationship with other indicators, such as Ellenberg’s ecological indicators, or the Grime model [Grime, J.P., 2002. Plant Strategies, Vegetation Processes and Ecosystem Properties. Wiley, Chichester] and the Hemeroby index [Kowarik, I., 1990. Some responses of flora and vegetation to urbanization in Central Europe. In: Sukopp, H., Hejny, S., Kowarik, I. (Eds.), Urban Ecology. Plants and plant communities in urban environments. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague] is still poorly explored. We concentrated on an urban ecosystem because such areas, due to heir high degree of artificialization, are particularly well suited for studying the interaction of anthropical disturbance with other processes of the ecosystems. This paper attempts to select a small indicator frameset of many already proposed indicators which best express the variability of the sites studied. A floristic-ecological investigation has been carried out in 10 urban sites, of which 6 were archeological, located in the centre of Rome and 4 suburban, semi-natural, in the NE of the town. Ecological indicators have been calculated on this data set. The Pearson correlation test was then applied to verify whether the indicators were independent, while stepwise regression analysis was done to evaluate the statistical weight of each ecoindicator. Disturbance and temperature are the main factors shaping the composition of the sites studied. They are largely interacting and are well expressed with the help of a small subset of the initial set of 19 indicators, namely, by indicators related to life forms and to the geographical distribution of species: Therophytes/Hemicryptophytes, Mediterranean/large distribution, Eurasiatic/large distribution, Mediterranean/Eurasiatic species. The information provided by Ellenberg’s indicators values and Grime’s life strategies are largely summarized by these chorological indicators

    Quercus suber communities in the urban area of Rome.

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