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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/26445
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Title: | Bioclimatology, Structure, and Conservation Perspectives of Quercus pyrenaica, Acer opalus subsp. Granatensis, and Corylus avellana Deciduous Forests on Mediterranean Bioclimate in the South-Central Part of the Iberian Peninsula |
Authors: | Piñar Fuentes, José Carlos Cano-Ortiz, Ana Musarella, Carmelo Quinto Canas, Ricardo Pinto-Gomes, Carlos Spampinato, Giovanni |
Keywords: | global warming bioclimate deciduous forests southern Iberian Peninsula sustainable management multivariable analyses |
Issue Date: | 2019 |
Publisher: | Sustainability |
Citation: | Piñar Fuentes, J.C., Cano-Ortiz, A., Musarella, C.M., Quinto Canas, R., Pinto-Gomes, C., Spampinato, G., del Río, S. & Cano E. (2019). Bioclimatology, Structure, and Conservation Perspectives of Quercus pyrenaica, Acer opalus subsp. Granatensis, and Corylus avellana Deciduous Forests on Mediterranean Bioclimate in the South-Central Part of the Iberian Peninsula. Sustainability, vol. 11, 6500. |
Abstract: | The plant variability in the southern Iberian Peninsula consists of around 3500 di erent taxa
due to its high bioclimatic, geographic, and geological diversity. The deciduous forests in the southern
Iberian Peninsula are located in regions with topographies and specific bioclimatic conditions that
allow for the survival of taxa that are typical of cooler and wetter bioclimatic regions and therefore
represent the relict evidence of colder and more humid paleoclimatic conditions. The floristic
composition of 421 samples of deciduous forests in the south-central part of the Iberian Peninsula
were analyzed. The ecological importance index (IVI) was calculated, where the most important tree
species were Quercus pyrenaica, Acer opalus subsp. Granatensis, and Corylus avellana. These species
are uncommon in the south-central part of the Iberian Peninsula, forming forests of little extension.
An analysis of the vertical distribution of the species (stratum) shows that the majority of the species
of stratum 3 (hemicriptophics, camephytes, geophites, and nanophanerophytes) are characteristic
of deciduous forests, and their presence is positively correlated with high values of bioclimatic
variables related to humidity and presence of water in the soil (nemoral environments), while they
are negatively correlated with high values of bioclimatic variables related to high temperatures,
evapotranspiration, and aridity. This work demonstrates that several characteristic deciduous forest
taxa are more vulnerable to disappearance due to the loss of their nemoral conditions caused by gaps
in the tree or shrub canopy. These gaps lead to an increase in evapotranspiration, excess insolation,
and a consequent loss of water and humidity in the microclimatic conditions. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/26445 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | PAO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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