2003
DOI: 10.1007/bf02803244
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The calcareous riddle: Why are there so many calciphilous species in the Central European flora?

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Cited by 206 publications
(146 citation statements)
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“…The creation of young calcareous soils at the expense of mature acid soils through periglacial processes of denudation, solifluction and sedimentation of löss may have temporarily favoured evolution of calciphilous species (Ewald 2003), but acid soils and mineral-poor wetlands have probably prevailed in the boreal zone for long time periods. During that shift in habitat conditions, nutrient availability seemed to have increased, which may have been a beneficial factor to bryophyte evolution.…”
Section: Relationships With Plant and Soil Nutrientsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The creation of young calcareous soils at the expense of mature acid soils through periglacial processes of denudation, solifluction and sedimentation of löss may have temporarily favoured evolution of calciphilous species (Ewald 2003), but acid soils and mineral-poor wetlands have probably prevailed in the boreal zone for long time periods. During that shift in habitat conditions, nutrient availability seemed to have increased, which may have been a beneficial factor to bryophyte evolution.…”
Section: Relationships With Plant and Soil Nutrientsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, biotic interactions such as facilitation could locally lead to a higher species number than the harshness of the environment would forecast (Callaway et al 2002). On the other hand, communities on siliceous soils could harbour fewer species than the environment would allow since, in Central Europe, the pool of species able to colonise acid soils is smaller than that for calcareous soils (Chytry´et al 2003;Ewald 2003).…”
Section: Two-factor Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Major environmental factors, that have caused long-term changes in various types of vegetation, have been traced from the floristic composition of historical and recent data sets in forest vegetation (Wittig et al 1985;Hédl 2004), meadows (Knollová 2004;Bennie et al 2006) and weeds (Ejrnaes et al 2003;Lososová et al 2004). EIV can also be used to research appropriate management techniques (Decocq et al 2004) or for interpretation of patterns of species diversity (Cornwell & Grubb 2003;Ewald 2003a). Large database data sets have recently been subjected to such analyses (e. g., Wohlgemuth & Gigon 2003), as well as to calibrations using direct environmental measurements (Ertsen et al 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%