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Title (eng)
Ecotones in Central European forest–steppe: Edge effect occurs on hard rocks but not on loess
Author
Helena Prokešová
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University
Author
Mário Duchoň
Regional Association for Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development (BROZ)
Author
Klára Klinkovská
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University
Author
Pavel Novák
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University
Author
Milan Chytrý
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University
Author
Jan Divíšek
Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University
Abstract (eng)

Aims: We asked how geological substrate affects the distribution of plant species between forest interiors, forest edges, and steppe patches in the forest–steppe landscapes. Specifically, we sought for the presence of the edge effect at the forest–grassland transitions on different substrates.
Location: Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and western Ukraine.
Methods: We recorded the occurrence of vascular plant species in forest interiors, at forest edges and in steppe patches on 40 forest–steppe sites located on four substrates (andesite, dolomite, limestone and loess). We compared the distribution of species diversity, beta diversity (using multivariate analysis), the number of shared species between habitats and the estimation of vegetation biomass among forest-steppe habitats on different substrates.
Results: The edge effect was observed on hard rocks, while it was absent on loess, where the ecotone species richness was intermediate between that of forest and steppe. Loess sites also had the lowest species turnover between forest and steppe and the lowest number of edge specialists.
Conclusions: Substrate has a strong effect on the formation of forest–steppe mosaics. It shapes the assembly rules and plant community diversity within individual habitat mosaics. Plant communities on each substrate can respond differently to changing climate. The strong assembly rules on hard rocks may be more likely to result in species loss than on loess or similar soft sediments, where a larger number of species find their optimum in more than one forest–steppe habitat.

Keywords (eng)
ecotoneedge-effectforest-steppehabitat mosaicsubstratevegetation
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:1632734
Is in series
Title
Journal of Vegetation Science
Volume
33
Issue
5
ISSN
1100-9233
Issued
2022
Publication
Wiley
Date issued
2022
Zugangsberechtigungen (eng)
Rights statement (eng)
© 2022 The Authors
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Details
Object type
PDFDocument
Format
application/pdf
Created
17.02.2023 09:12:17
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