scholarly journals Microfungal diversity of Juncus trifidus L. and Salix herbacea L. at isolated locations in the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains

2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brayan Jacewski ◽  
Jacek Urbaniak ◽  
Paweł Kwiatkowski ◽  
Wojciech Pusz

During cold periods in the Pleistocene Epoch, many plants known as the “relict species” migrated and inhabited new areas. Together with plants, some microfungi also migrated, remaining present on plants and in plant communities. However, the relationship between fungi and the migrating plants (especially host plants) is not well understood. Therefore, we examined the diversity and distribution of microfungi associated with two migratory relict plants in the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains: <em>Salix herbacea</em> L. and <em>Juncus trifidus</em> L. In total, we found 17 taxa of fungi that were collected from nine different locations. Nine fungal taxa were collected on <em>S. herbacea</em>, and eight taxa on <em>J. trifidus</em>. Localities richest of fungi on <em>S. herbacea</em> were Mały Śnieżny Kocioł (Karkonosze Mts, Sudetes) and on <em>J. trifidus</em>, the Tatra Mts (Carpathian Mts). This work provides new insights into the distribution of fungi inhabiting <em>S. herbacea</em> and <em>J. trifidus</em> in Poland.

2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 2033
Author(s):  
Ivana Marić ◽  
Irena Međo ◽  
Slobodan Jovanović ◽  
Radmila Petanović ◽  
Dejan Marčić

Despite economic importance of Tetranychidae, knowledge regarding diversity of spider mites in the Balkan Peninsula and Southeast Europe is incomplete, especially in protected natural areas. This study presents diversity of spider mites (Acari: Tetranychidae) collected over five growing seasons at 296 locations in 38 protected natural areas of Serbia. A total of 31 spider mite species were found, 10 from Bryobiinae and 21 from Tetranychinae. The species Eotetranychus fagi Zacher was recorded as new to Serbia and this record was also the first one for Southeast Europe. Spider mites were found on host plants in five basic types as well as many subtypes of terrestrial habitats, with woodland as the most dominant one. A total of 151 plant species from 44 families were recorded as hosts for spider mites including new world records: 60 new hosts for family Tetranychidae and 41 new hosts for 21 spider mite species. Host plants from Rosaceae family harbored the highest number of spider mite species (16). A considerable number of species was found on host plants from the families Betulaceae (11), Asteraceae (10) and Sapindaceae (10). Two cosmopolitan spider mites, Tetranychus urticae Koch and Tetranychus turkestani Ugarov & Nikolskii, were clearly distinguished with 67 (7 new) and 43 (13 new) recorded host species, respectively; among newly recorded hosts for Tetranychidae family, these two mite species were found on 27 and 12 hosts, respectively. After the two most common species, the most striking was the presence of Bryobia praetiosa Koch with 24 (4 new) recorded host plants, followed by Amphitetranychus viennensis (Zacher), Eotetranychus carpini (Oudemans) and Bryobia rubrioculus (Scheuten), with 21 (7 new), 20 (6 new) and 16 (2 new) hosts, respectively. The remaining tetranychids were found on 1–9 host plant species. This study provided the first insight into diversity of tetranychids in Serbian protected areas. Further research in this field should focus on mites from host plants representative of specific areas and habitats, including endangered, endemic and relict species.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 53-75
Author(s):  
Dimitrios Zervas ◽  
Ioannis Tsiripidis ◽  
Erwin Bergmeier ◽  
Vasiliki Tsiaoussi

Aims: This study aims to contribute to the knowledge of European freshwater lake ecosystems with updated and new information on aquatic plant communities, by conducting national-scale phytosociological research of freshwater lake vegetation in Greece. Moreover, it investigates the relationship between aquatic plant communities and lake environmental parameters, including eutrophication levels and hydro-morphological conditions. Study area: Lakes in Greece, SE Europe. Methods: 5,690 phytosociological relevés of aquatic vegetation were sampled in 18 freshwater lake ecosystems during 2013–2016. The relevés were subjected to hierarchical cluster and indicator species analyses in order to identify associations and communities of aquatic vegetation, as well as to describe their syntaxonomy. Multiple regression analysis was applied to investigate the relationship between vegetation syntaxa and environmental parameters of lakes, i.e. physico-chemical parameters and water level fluctuation. Results: Ninety-nine plant taxa belonging to 30 different families were recorded. Forty-six vegetation types were identified and described by their ecological characteristics, diagnostic taxa and syntaxonomical status. Thirteen vegetation types, the largest number belonging to the vegetation class Charetea, are considered to be new records for Greece. The distribution of the vegetation types recorded in the 18 freshwater lakes was found to depend on environmental parameters and levels of eutrophication. Conclusions: An updated aquatic vegetation inventory was produced for Greek lakes, and primary results showed that the presence/absence of aquatic plant communities and the community composition in freshwater lakes can be utilized to assess the pressure of eutrophication on lake ecosystems. Taxonomic reference: Euro+Med (2006–). Abbreviations: MNT = Mean number of taxa; WFD = Water Framework Directive.


Zootaxa ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 1793 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
CONG WEI ◽  
M. D. WEBB ◽  
YALIN ZHANG

The identities of the Oriental leafhopper genera Cyrta Melichar and Placidus Distant are reviewed, and Cyrta is placed as a senior synonym of Placidus. The following new combinations and new species are proposed for Cyrta: C. brunnea (Kuoh) comb. n.; C. dentata (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; C. flosifronta (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; C. furcata (Li & Zhang) comb. n.; Cyrta hornei (Distant) comb. n.; C. incurvata (Wei & Zhang) comb. n.; C. longwanshensis (Li & Zhang) comb. n.; C. nigrocupulifera (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; C. orientalis (Schumacher) comb. n.; C. striolata (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; C. testacea (Kuoh) comb. n.; C. vicina (Dlabola) comb. n.; C. tiantaishanensis sp. n.; C. spinosa sp. n.; C. conduplicata sp. n.; C. coalita sp. n. and C. fujianensis sp. n. A new genus, Paracyrta gen. n., is erected to accommodate the following species previously included in Cyrta: P. blattina (Jacobi) comb. n.; P. recusetosa (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; P. setosa (Zhang & Sun) comb. n.; P. banna (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; P. bicolor (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; P. longiloba (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; P. dentata (Zhang & Wei) comb. n.; P. bimaculata (Zhang & Sun) comb. n.; P. parafrons (Zhang & Wei) comb. n. A key is provided for the above species of Cyrta and the relationship between Cyrta and Paracyrta and other Oriental stegelytrine genera is given. The host plants and mud-puddling behaviour of the representatives of this subfamily are discussed.


1961 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 191-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. V. Joyce

The Cicadellid, Empoasca lybica de Berg, is an important pest of cotton in the Sudan Gezira, where over 300,000 acres of cotton are grown annually under irrigation. Cotton is sown in mid-August, and the plants are uprooted and burnt the following May. The life-cycle of E. lybica from egg to gravid adult takes 16–24 days, and the adults live for up to 40 days. There is no diapause. During the 100 days from late August to early December when breeding on cotton is of economic importance, a single male and female could give rise to some 50,000 progeny.During May to July, when crops are confined to irrigated gardens and river banks, E. lybica is widely distributed in such places and can be found also on tree hosts, which are numerous especially in the southern Gezira and along river banks. There is circumstantial evidence of displacement over long distances, and the great majority of catches of E. lybica in sticky traps were made before the increase in population on cotton that occurs from September onwards.Of the 53 species of host-plants that have been recorded, only Solanum dubium, Rhynchosia memnonia, Hibiscus spp. and Abutilon spp. are of importance in the ecology of E. lybica. The first two especially are common weeds in fallows, which comprise more than half the land under rotation. Populations of E. lybica in Gezira fallows at the time of cotton germination tended to be greatest where pre-sowing rains (i.e., those falling from 1st July to 15th August) were highest. Correspondingly, initial infestation of cotton was highest in seasons and places receiving the most pre-sowing rains, although density of infestation in any place was affected by sowing date and proximity to irrigated fields and gardens which supported weed host-plants.In order to develop a system of sampling for infestations of E. lybica in the cotton crop, the distribution of nymphs on cotton plants was examined. It was found that nymphs were most numerous in the leafiest zones of the plant and a random choice of leaves seemed an appropriate means of sampling for infestation. The distribution of nymphs within and between cotton fields was also investigated and a standard sampling procedure adopted.Peak infestations on cotton could not be predicted from the level of initial colonisation, or from surveys a month later. Peak infestations were usually inversely related to the level of initial colonisation, especially when comparisons were made between seasons, as at the Gezira Research Farm. That is to say, high levels of initial infestation, which occurred in seasons of good pre-sowing rains, tended to be followed by low rates of increase, and in years of poor pre-sowing rains, initial infestations tended to be low and rates of increase high.The relationship of these findings to those of Cowland & Hanna (1950) and Hanna (1950) are discussed; the hypothesis that pre-sowing mud-splash is a major factor controlling numbers of E. lybica in the Sudan Gezira is discounted, although it is accepted that this factor temporarily reduces populations.The rate of increase of infestations of E. lybica was found to be positively correlated with the concentration of nitrogen recorded 2–4 weeks previously in the cotton leaf. This concentration affected not only the rate of increase of the initial colonisers, but also the rate of recovery of populations during November and December after spray-applications of DDT. The nitrogen concentration in the leaf was increased by nitrogenous fertiliser, with a corresponding increase in infestations of E. lybica. It was also found to be negatively correlated with pre-sowing rains, which, if low, prevent the nitrate in the top 12 in. of Gezira soil being washed to lower levels, but the data presented provide no evidence that the relationship is causal.It is concluded that localities and seasons of poor pre-sowing rains favour a high rate of increase of small populations of E. lybica because of high nitrogen concentration in cotton leaves during September and October. This tendency is augmented by application of nitrogenous fertiliser. A regression equation relating the peak infestations of E. lybica with pre-sowing rainfall and with nitrogenous fertiliser is given and the infestations computed from this are shown not to differ significantly from those recorded in the Gezira as a whole, and in the four main divisions of it separately, during the eight years 1949–1956.


1994 ◽  
Vol 346 (1316) ◽  
pp. 185-193 ◽  

The Park Grass Experiment (PGE), begun at Rothamsted Experimental Station in 1856 and still running, affords a unique opportunity to test for the influence of species number and soil reaction on biomass variability in a suite of comparable plant communities. Biomass variability was measured by calculating the coefficient of variation ( CV ) over time of annual hay yield in an eleven-year moving window. CV and species number were both strongly negatively correlated with biomass; both relations were affected by time and pH. Multiple regression of CV on species number and mean biomass for nonacidified plots in 42 years between 1862 and 1991 showed a relationship between biomass and CV which was negative in most years and significantly so in nearly three quarters of them (30/42). We are unable to tell how much of this effect is intrinsic to the statistical relation between the mean and CV of biomass. Species number was negatively correlated with CV in 29/42 years, but this was statistically significant on only three occasions. Because this relation was highly significant in the year (1991) for which we have the largest sample size (34 plots), we tentatively conclude that biomass variability may be lower in more species-rich communities, although the effect is possibly a weak one. We suggest that physiological stresses imposed by low pH may explain the greater variability of plots with acidified soil. An increase in the variability of biomass that occurred across plots with time may be due in part to acidification across the whole experiment. Three hypotheses are proposed to explain the relationship between species richness and biomass variability: (i) biomass variability on more species-rich plots is better buffered against climatic variation because species differ in their response to climatic conditions: (ii) there are fewer species on plots with greater biomass variability because species have been lost by competitive exclusion in years when biomass reaches high values; (iii) species richness and variability are both correlated with a third variable, for example soil moisture deficit within a plot. All three hypotheses are susceptible to testing within the PGE.


Biologia ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Petrík ◽  
Zuzana Dúbravcová ◽  
Ivan Jarolímek ◽  
Ján Kliment ◽  
Jozef Šibík ◽  
...  

AbstractWe present a syntaxonomic account of the communities of the alliances of Oxytropido-Elynion Br.-Bl. 1949 and Festucion versicoloris Krajina 1933 from Western Carpathians. Both alliances comprise naked-rush, cushion form and dwarf-shrub heath communities typical of wind-exposed habitats occurring at the highest altitudes of the Tatra Mts. They represent a relic vegetation of the cold stages of the Pleistocene (probably Late Glacial Maximum) and they can be classified within the class of Carici rupestris-Kobresietea bellardii Ohba 1974. A set of relevés was subject to numerical-classification analysis. Floristics and ecology of the communities were characterised and the relationships to similar syntaxa were discussed.The Oxytropido-Elynion is restricted to the extreme ridge positions in the highest altitudes of the Belianske Tatry Mts. Five associations were distinguished, such as the Pyrolo carpaticae-Salicetum reticulatae, the Festuco versicoloris-Oreochloetum distichae, the Festucetum versicoloris, the Oxytropido carpaticae-Elynetum myosuroides and the Drabo siliquosae-Festucetum versicoloris.The Festucion versicoloris is limited to the mylonite zone of the alpine and subnival belt of the Vysoké Tatry and Západné Tatry Mts (and found as rare in the Nízke Tatry Mts). The stands of these communities prefer terraces of steep rocky faces and cliffs and stabilised small-grained screes below the cliffs. Within this alliance, three associations were described, including the Agrostio alpinae-Festucetum versicoloris, the Silenetum acaulis and the Salicetum kitaibelianae.


2021 ◽  
Vol 257 ◽  
pp. 03021
Author(s):  
Jiancai Sun ◽  
Yonghui Li ◽  
Deting Deng ◽  
Sha Yang ◽  
Yukun Wu ◽  
...  

Community dominant plants and their ecological niche research is the focus of community ecology research. To explore the niche characteristics of desert dominant plants and the relationship between them and soil factors in Qaidam Basin, and to provide a basis for the construction of desert plant communities and the sustainable management of natural resources in Qaidam Basin. Taking 13 desert plant communities in Qaidam Basin, Qinghai Province as the research objects, this paper analyzed the characteristics of desert plant communities and dominant species based on soil physical and chemical properties, and calculated the niche width and niche overlap of dominant plants. The dominant plants are, Haloxylon ammodendron, Tamarix chinensis, Achnatherum splendens, Poacynum hendersonii, Reaumuria songonica, Phragmites australiss, Sympegma regelii, and Ajania Tenuifolia, Artemisia sphaerocephala, Ceratoides latens, Pearl russianthistle, Scirpustriquter. There were different degree of niche overlap among species in the community. In addition, CCA sequencing showed that different species had different requirements on the environment, and the distribution of dominant species was mainly affected by soil total nitrogen and soil organic matter.


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