2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2007.04.021
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Elevation and exposition rather than soil types determine communities and site suitability in Mediterranean mountain forests of southern Anatolia, Turkey

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Cited by 67 publications
(51 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(34 reference statements)
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“…We show that for an area of 8000 km², GIS calculations overall perform slightly better than slope-aspect transformations. This explains how many studies carried out on smaller areas detect predictive ability in northness or eastness indices (Horsch, 2003;Kennedy and Spiesa, 2004;Lassueur et al, 2006;Fontaine et al, 2007;Gong et al, 2008). These results justify the choice of the cloud cover model for plant modelling for all the studied scales.…”
Section: A4aa3c688supporting
confidence: 59%
“…We show that for an area of 8000 km², GIS calculations overall perform slightly better than slope-aspect transformations. This explains how many studies carried out on smaller areas detect predictive ability in northness or eastness indices (Horsch, 2003;Kennedy and Spiesa, 2004;Lassueur et al, 2006;Fontaine et al, 2007;Gong et al, 2008). These results justify the choice of the cloud cover model for plant modelling for all the studied scales.…”
Section: A4aa3c688supporting
confidence: 59%
“…Species found in fewer than four plots (frequency<8%) were removed from the PCA analysis (Singleton et al 2001;Fontaine et al 2007) because they exhibited a relatively low amount of mean cover compared with the other species analysed and introduced random noise into the analysis. Plant species data, coded as in Appendix B, were projected onto bi-plots of factorial axes (using untransformed data).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, topography interacts with local wind direction, microclimates and, in turn, vegetation type, fuel loads and moisture content. Several studies have shown topographic influences on vegetation composition and structure (Fontaine et al, 2007;Rescia et al, 1994), transpiration and desiccation conditions (Rana et al, 2005;Van der Trol et al, 2007), vegetation dynamics (Carmel andFlather, 2004;Mouillot et al, 2005), fire severity (Broncano and Retana 2004), and post-fire vegetation regeneration (Peñuelas et al, 2007;Baeza et al, 2007). Furthermore, some of the observed topographic effects on fire occurrence can be explained by human activities (e.g.…”
Section: Fire Hazard Is Higher In Specific Topographic Locationsmentioning
confidence: 99%