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Code of phytosociological nomenclature

Vegetatio, 1976
Deuxieme edition de ce code dont la mejeure partie du texte reste inchangee; la division du code ainsi que la numerotation des articles et des recommandations ont ete ...
Barkman, J.J.   +2 more
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Southern kalahari phytosociology

Vegetatio, 1973
The vegetation of the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, which lies in the centre of the semi-arid Southern Kalahari, was studied. This area is considered to be largely representative of the Southern Kalahari in general. The region is covered by a layer of red sand piled into dunes. Two large dry river-beds cross the area and numerous pans occur. Calcrete
O. A. Leistner, M. J. A. Werger
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Fuzzy logic for phytosociology

Vegetatio, 1993
The present paper aims to give an analysis of properties of the phytosociological language, which relates to the vagueness of some concepts in vegetation science. A translation of the simplest synsystematic propositions into possibility distributions has been proposed.
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Phytosociology.

The Journal of Ecology, 1979
A. J. C. Malloch, R. P. McIntosh
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The phytosociological approach in North American studies: Some considerations on phytosociological nomenclature

Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica, 1997
Phytosociology is a modem science which uses a methodology recognized by most plant ecologists to be the most efficient and effective way to explain natural vegetation patterns in a geographic area with a variety of ecological features. This approach is widely used in Europe, Asia, and North Africa, but not yet in North America.
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A critique for phytosociology

Journal of Vegetation Science, 2003
Abstract.Phytosociology is a subdiscipline of plant ecology that describes the co‐occurrence of plant species in communities. Gradient analysis and classification are its complementary tools. Various peculiarities and anachronisms of Central European phytosociology conceal its similarity with Anglo‐American approaches.
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Phytosociology

Ecological communities possess distinct structural attributes that help differentiate various ecosystems, with both plant and animal communities playing integral roles. Plant ecologists focus on the structural classification of plant communities, while animal ecologists emphasize functional interrelationships.
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Phytosociology and phenology

1987
Relatively little is known about the syntaxonomy of the vegetation of central african floodplains. In 1978 Werger & Coetzee presented an account of the information on the floodplains within the Sudano-Zambezian Region available until then. From this account it is clear that the current knowledge of these floodplains is remarkably low (compare also ...
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Phytosociology and Archaeobotany

2016
In theory, the location of pollen profiles on the sites of past human activity might be expected to provide the fullest and most sensitive records. The off-site location of pollen profiles enables the palynologist to examine the environmental history of what may be a greater number of sites at the possible expense of the degree of certainty regarding ...
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Phytosociological associations of algal periphyton

1983
In the search for a method to distinguish ecological units of periphytic algal communities, the phytosociological method was applied. On the basis of numerous samples collected from 49 lakes, it was found that there occur two associations in the lakes of Northern Poland: Oedogonio-Epithemietum litoralae in eutrophic lakes, and Hapalosiphono ...
Ryszard Bohr   +2 more
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