Marcela Řezníčková - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
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Università degli Studi "La Sapienza" di Roma
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Papers by Marcela Řezníčková
by Andraž Čarni, Flavia Landucci, Kateřina Šumberová, daniela gigante, Úna Fitzpatrick, PANAYOTIS DIMOPOULOS, Els De Bie, Jazep Stepanovich, S. Radulovic, Marcela Řezníčková, Claudia Bita-Nicolae, Rišo Hrivnák, E. Papastergiadou, Csiky János, Wolfgang Willner, and Борис Тетерюк
WetVegEurope is a research project (http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/vegsci/wetveg) whose goal is to... more WetVegEurope is a research project (http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/vegsci/wetveg) whose goal is to
provide a synthesized formalized classification of the aquatic and marsh vegetation across Europe at the level of
phytosociological associations. In order to achieve the project objective, a WetVegEurope database has been
created (GIVD ID: EU-00-020, http://www.givd.info/ID/EU-00-020), which currently contains 375,212 vegetation
plots of aquatic, marsh and wet vegetation types from 33 European countries. The WetVegEurope database
includes datasets from pre-existing national and thematic databases and also 10,616 plots previously not
digitalized or even unpublished. This database offers an extensive source of data for future studies on aquatic
and marsh plant species and vegetation types at the European scale.
Plant Ecology, 2008
Southern Siberian mountain ranges encompass strong climatic contrasts from the relatively oceanic... more Southern Siberian mountain ranges encompass strong climatic contrasts from the relatively oceanic northern foothills to strongly continental intermountain basins in the south. Landscapescale climatic differences create vegetation patterns, which are analogous to the broad-scale vegetation zonation over large areas of northern Eurasia. In their southern, continental areas, these mountains harbour environmental factors was expressed with Huisman-Olff-Fresco models. Larix sibirica appeared to be most resistant to drought and winter frosts, Pinus sibirica was adapted to low temperatures both in winter and summer, and Picea obovata had an intermediate response to climate. Betula pendula, Pinus sylvestris and Populus tremula were associated with the warmest sites with intermediate precipitation, while Abies sibirica was the most moisturedemanding species, sensitive to deep winter frosts.
by Andraž Čarni, Flavia Landucci, Kateřina Šumberová, daniela gigante, Úna Fitzpatrick, PANAYOTIS DIMOPOULOS, Els De Bie, Jazep Stepanovich, S. Radulovic, Marcela Řezníčková, Claudia Bita-Nicolae, Rišo Hrivnák, E. Papastergiadou, Csiky János, Wolfgang Willner, and Борис Тетерюк
WetVegEurope is a research project (http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/vegsci/wetveg) whose goal is to... more WetVegEurope is a research project (http://www.sci.muni.cz/botany/vegsci/wetveg) whose goal is to
provide a synthesized formalized classification of the aquatic and marsh vegetation across Europe at the level of
phytosociological associations. In order to achieve the project objective, a WetVegEurope database has been
created (GIVD ID: EU-00-020, http://www.givd.info/ID/EU-00-020), which currently contains 375,212 vegetation
plots of aquatic, marsh and wet vegetation types from 33 European countries. The WetVegEurope database
includes datasets from pre-existing national and thematic databases and also 10,616 plots previously not
digitalized or even unpublished. This database offers an extensive source of data for future studies on aquatic
and marsh plant species and vegetation types at the European scale.
Plant Ecology, 2008
Southern Siberian mountain ranges encompass strong climatic contrasts from the relatively oceanic... more Southern Siberian mountain ranges encompass strong climatic contrasts from the relatively oceanic northern foothills to strongly continental intermountain basins in the south. Landscapescale climatic differences create vegetation patterns, which are analogous to the broad-scale vegetation zonation over large areas of northern Eurasia. In their southern, continental areas, these mountains harbour environmental factors was expressed with Huisman-Olff-Fresco models. Larix sibirica appeared to be most resistant to drought and winter frosts, Pinus sibirica was adapted to low temperatures both in winter and summer, and Picea obovata had an intermediate response to climate. Betula pendula, Pinus sylvestris and Populus tremula were associated with the warmest sites with intermediate precipitation, while Abies sibirica was the most moisturedemanding species, sensitive to deep winter frosts.