Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1921
Title: Emergent wetland vegetation data recording: Does an optimal period exist?
Authors: Jenačković, Dragana D.
Lakušić, Dmitar 
Zlatković, Ivana
Jušković, Marina
Ranđelović, N. Vladimir
Keywords: central Balkan Peninsula;emergent wetland vegetation;optimal sampling time;plant life forms;relevant relevés;seasonal variability;species composition;species cover;water regime
Issue Date: 1-Apr-2019
Rank: M21a
Journal: Applied Vegetation Science
Abstract: 
Certain parts of the growing season have been proposed as optimal for recording relevant relevés of forests and dry grasslands and so the monitoring of these vegetation types has become more time- and cost-effective. We investigated whether it is possible to propose an optimal period during the year for making relevant relevés of emergent wetland vegetation. Location: Marshlands of the central Balkan Peninsula. Methods: One hundred and eighty-five permanent vegetation plots were investigated in three distinct time periods: spring, summer and autumn. In order to identify the communities, cluster analyses were carried out, and diagnostic species for each cluster were determined. The potential for temporal change of the communities regarding the species and life form composition was assessed using PERMANOVA and NMDS analyses. The Friedman test was used to assess the significance of seasonal change in the communities regarding their species richness, recordability and Shannon diversity. Results: The level of floristic similarity among the 11 phytocoenoses analyzed significantly varied over the growing season while the composition in terms of their diagnostic species remained unchanged. The majority of the communities showed statistically significant seasonal changes in the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of the vegetation, life form composition and cover. Although different communities expressed significant modifications in these parameters between different pairs of seasons, all of them showed changes in the mentioned parameters between spring and autumn. The degree of intra-annual variation in the species richness, species recordability and Shannon diversity was low in almost all phytocoenoses. Conclusions: Summer is the optimal period for recording most of the species from the total list of the communities developed on hydrologically stable habitats, while spring is more appropriate for making relevés on periodically inundated habitats. The sampling time has negligible impact on the classification of associations but it could have important implications for the classification of higher-ranked syntaxonomic units of the class Phragmito-Magnocaricetea.
URI: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1921
ISSN: 1402-2001
DOI: 10.1111/avsc.12419
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