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Shedding light on typical species: Implications for habitat monitoring

Authors :
Bonari, Gianmaria
Fantinato, Edy
Lazzaro, Lorenzo
Gaia Sperandii, Marta
Teresa, Alicia
Acosta, Rosario
Allegrezza, Marina
Assini, Silvia
Caccianiga, Marco
Cecco, Valter Di
Frattaroli, Annarita
Gigante, Daniela
Rivieccio, Giovanni
Tesei, Giulio
Valle, Barbara
Viciani, Daniele
Albani Rocchetti, Giulia
Angiolini, Claudia
Badalamenti, Emilio
Barberis, Davide
Barcella, Matteo
Bazan, Giuseppe
Bertacchi, Andrea
Bolpagni, Rossano
Bonini, Federica
Bricca, Alessandro
Buffa, Gabriella
Calbi, Mariasole
Cannucci, Silvia
Cao Pinna, Luigi
Caria, Maria Carmela
Carli, Emanuela
Cascone, Silvia
Casti, Mauro
Cerabolini, Bruno Enrico Leone
Copiz, Riccardo
Cutini, Maurizio
Simone, Leopoldo De
Toma, Andrea De
Fratte, Michele Dalle
Martino, Luciano Di
Pietro, Romeo Di
Filesi, Leonardo
Foggi, Bruno
Fortini, Paola
Gennaio, Roberto
Gheza, Gabriele
Lonati, Michele
Mainetti, Andrea
Malavasi, Marco
Marcenò, Corrado
Micheli, Carla
Minuzzo, Chiara
Mugnai, Michele
Musarella, Carmelo Maria
Napoleone, Francesca
Nota, Ginevra
Piga, Giovanna
Pittarello, Marco
Pozzi, Ilaria
Praleskouskaya, Safiya
Rota, Francesco
Santini, Giacomo
Sarmati, Simona
Selvaggi, Alberto
Spampinato, Giovanni
Stinca, Adriano
Pio Tozzi, Francesco
Venanzoni, Roberto
Villani, Mariacristina
Zanatta, Katia
Zanzottera, Magda
Bagella, Simonetta
Libera Università di Bolzano
Czech Science Foundation
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Pensoft Publishers, 2021.

Abstract

Habitat monitoring in Europe is regulated by Article 17 of the Habitats Directive, which suggests the use of typical species to assess habitat conservation status. Yet, the Directive uses the term “typical” species but does not provide a definition, either for its use in reporting or for its use in impact assessments. To address the issue , a n online workshop was organized by the Italian Society for Vegetation Science (SISV) to shed light on the diversity of perspectives regarding the different concepts of typical species, and to discuss the possible implications for habitat monitoring. To this aim, we inquired 73 people with a very different degree of expertise in the field of vegetation science by means of a tailored survey composed of six questions. We analysed the data using Pearson's Chi-squared test to verify that the answers diverged from a random distribution and checked the effect of the degree of experience of the surveyees on the results. We found that most of the surveyees agreed on the use of the phytosociological method for habitat monitoring and of the diagnostic and characteristic species to evaluate the structural and functional conservation status of habitats. With this contribution, we shed light on the meaning of “typical” species in the context of habitat monitoring.<br />G.Bo. was funded by the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano through the CONplant project (TN201H). C.Ma. was funded by the Czech Science Foundation (Project No. 19- 28491X).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..07e501274c2a522488b3517807df7eba