4 results on '"Wagensommer, ROBERT PHILIPP"'
Search Results
2. Ophioglossum lusitanicum L.: New Records of Plant Community and 92/43/EEC Habitat in Italy.
- Author
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Perrino, Enrico Vito, Tomaselli, Valeria, Wagensommer, Robert Philipp, Silletti, Giuseppe Nicola, Esposito, Assunta, and Stinca, Adriano
- Subjects
VOLCANIC soils ,CALCAREOUS soils ,SOIL surveys ,PLANT communities ,SOIL classification ,GROUND vegetation cover ,SOIL mapping ,HABITATS ,ANNUALS (Plants) - Abstract
In this paper, integrating field surveys and literature data, an analysis of Ophioglossum lusitanicum plant communities and related 92/43/EEC habitats are reported for Italy. Two new syntaxa, Euphorbio exiguae-Ophioglossetum lusitanici ass. nova hoc loco and trifolietosum scabri subass. nova hoc loco of the Rumici bucephalophori-Ophioglossetum lusitanici were described in the Apulia and Campania regions.Both types of vegetation identified in Apulia, Campania, and Sicily regions represent two different aspects of the same priority habitat: "pseudo-steppe with grasses and annuals of the Thero-Brachypodietea" (habitat code 6220*). A phytosociological and ecological dataset of the literature and new field surveys highlighting the soil type as parameters affecting the vegetation cover of this small fernlike plant, with the Trachynion distachyae Rivas–Martínez, 1978 alliance on calcareous soils and Helianthemion guttati Br.-Bl. in Br.-Bl. et al., 1940 alliance on volcanic soils. Many species of other types of annual meadows have been identified within Ophioglossum communities due to the very small patches of land, where they have been found, and ecological conditions that facilitate this phenomenon of the transgression of other therophytes species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Crop Wild Relatives (CWRs) Threatened and Endemic to Italy: Urgent Actions for Protection and Use.
- Author
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Perrino, Enrico Vito and Wagensommer, Robert Philipp
- Subjects
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REED canary grass , *PLANT germplasm , *WILD plants , *PLANT habitats - Abstract
Simple Summary: Crop wild relatives (CWRs) are wild plants with an indirect use derived from their relatively close genetic relationship to a crop and have contributed to crop domestication for millennia. Nowadays, due to human overexploitation of plants and other environmental resources, they are threatened and hence need protection to guarantee plant evolution and food supply for the future of human generations. This concept is especially true for endemic CWRs, which have a greater risk of genetic erosion and/or extinction and need more urgent, specific targeted actions. In this study, the Italian threatened and endemic CWRs, often exclusive of one administrative region, are discussed based on the Annex I Priority crops of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA, FAO). An updated overview of the 29 threatened crop wild relatives (CWRs) endemic to Italy is presented, namely: Arrhenatherum elatius subsp. nebrodense, Barbarea rupicola, Brassica baldensis, Brassica glabrescens, Brassica macrocarpa, Brassica rupestris subsp. hispida, Brassica rupestris subsp. rupestris, Brassica tardarae, Brassicatrichocarpa, Brassica tyrrhena, Brassica villosa subsp. bivonana, Brassica villosa subsp. brevisiliqua, Brassica villosa subsp. drepanensis, Brassica villosa subsp. tineoi, Brassica villosa subsp. villosa, Daucus broteroi, Daucus carota subsp. rupestris, Daucus nebrodensis, Diplotaxis scaposa, Festuca centroapenninica, Lathyrus apenninus, Lathyrus odoratus, Malus crescimannoi, Phalaris arundinacea subsp. rotgesii, Vicia brulloi, Vicia consentina, Vicia giacominiana, Vicia ochroleuca subsp. ochroleuca, Vicia tenuifolia subsp. elegans. Data concerning geographical distribution, ecology (including plant communities and habitats of the Directive 92/43/EEC), genetics (chromosome number, breeding system, and/or the existence of gene pools), threat status at the national and international level (Red Lists), key plant properties, and in situ and ex situ conservation were analyzed and shown. At present, most of the listed endemic CWRs, 23 out of 29, have no gene pool at all, so they are CWRs only according to the taxon group and not according to the gene pool concept. In addition, there is a serious lack of data on the ex situ conservation in gene banks, with 16 species identified as high priority (HP) while 22 taxa have high priority (A) for in situ conservation. With the aim of their protection, conservation, and valorization, specific and urgent actions are recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Italian Vascular Flora: New Findings, Updates and Exploration of Floristic Similarities between Regions.
- Author
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Stinca, Adriano, Musarella, Carmelo Maria, Rosati, Leonardo, Laface, Valentina Lucia Astrid, Licht, Wolfgang, Fanfarillo, Emanuele, Wagensommer, Robert Philipp, Galasso, Gabriele, Fascetti, Simonetta, Esposito, Assunta, Fiaschi, Tiberio, Nicolella, Gianluca, Chianese, Giuseppina, Ciaschetti, Giampiero, Salerno, Giovanni, Fortini, Paola, Di Pietro, Romeo, Perrino, Enrico Vito, Angiolini, Claudia, and De Simone, Leopoldo
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PLANT classification ,BOTANICAL specimens ,BOTANY ,PLANT diversity ,HERBARIA ,VASCULAR plants ,EXTRATERRESTRIAL beings - Abstract
The tradition of floristic studies in Italy has made it possible to obtain a good knowledge of plant diversity both on a national and regional scale. However, the lack of knowledge for some areas, advances in plant systematics and human activities related to globalization, highlight the need for further studies aimed at improving floristic knowledge. In this paper, based on fieldwork and herbaria and literature surveys, we update the knowledge on the Italian vascular flora and analyze the floristic similarities between the administrative regions. Four taxa, all exotic, were recorded for the first time in Italy and Europe. In detail, Elaeodendron croceum, Kalanchoë blossfeldiana, and Sedum spathulifolium var. spathulifolium were found as casual aliens, while Oxalis brasiliensis was reported as historical record based on some herbarium specimens. Furthermore, Kalanchoë laxiflora was confirmed as a casual alien species for Italy and Europe. Status changes for some taxa were proposed at both national and regional levels, as well as many taxa were reported as new or confirmed at the regional level. Currently the Italian vascular flora comprises 9150 taxa of which 7547 are native (of which 1598 are Italian endemics) and 1603 are exotic at the national level. The multivariate analysis of updated floristic data on a regional scale showed a clear distribution along the latitudinal gradient, in accordance with the natural geographical location of the regions in Italy. This pattern of plants distribution was not affected by the introduction of alien species. Despite some taxonomic and methodological issues which are still open, the data obtained confirm the important role of floristic investigations in the field and in herbaria, as well as the collaborative approach among botanists, in order to improve the knowledge of the Italian and European vascular flora. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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