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72 - 2002 - The genus Spiraea in cultivation in Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia (Acta Pruhoniciana) / Roman Businský
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Titre : 72 - 2002 - The genus Spiraea in cultivation in Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Roman Businský ; Ludmila Businská Année de publication : 2002 Importance : 169 p. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-80-85116-27-4 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Taxonomie
[CBNPMP-Géographique] République Tchèque
[CBNPMP-Géographique] SlovaquieMots-clés : Spiraea L., 1753 Résumé : History of the classification of the genus Spiraea (spirea, Rosaceae) with a view to the infrageneric division is given. Spireas have been used as ornamental flowering shrubs in Europe for more than 250 years. Significant quantity of spirea taxa cultivated in Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia was found on the basis of old herbarium evidence, historical documents and living plants. A taxonomic revision of spireas cultivated in, or documented from Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia was made in accordance with original literature and study of natural herbarium material of most species, and with field study of many taxa mostly in SE Asia, undertaken during eleven authors’ expeditions to China and Japan (where majority of species is native). Many of old determinations of spirea species in the cultivation, or in its herbarium evidence were found to be incorrect. About 70 taxa of living plants of spireas from the territory of former Czechoslovakia were collected (mostly propagated vegetatively) in the Dendrological garden of the Research Institute of Ornamental Gardening at Průhonice near Praha in the 1980’s. This spirea assortment was being evaluated for six or eight years from horticultural points of view concerning phenological data, growth and habitus, aesthetic characterization, tolerance to winter frosts and extent of damage by aphids. Three categories of gardening prosperousness of evaluated clones were established. Systematic treatment of all taxa of the genus Spiraea found to be cultivated, documented or mentioned from Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia is given together with drawings of 78 attested taxa. All taxa given are divided into two groups: the group of natural species with their subspecies, varieties and directly derived cultivars, and the group of cultural taxa in the rank of species (interspecific hybrids or hybrid cultivars). Altogether 42 natural species (more than 100 taxa in total) were attested to be cultivated in the territory of Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia since about the mid-19th century. Three taxonomic changes are proposed: Spiraea mongolica Maxim. (known from China) is treated as a synonym of Spiraea lasiocarpa Kar. & Kir. (known from Central Asia from the territory of former Soviet Union); Spiraea fritschiana Schneid. var. microgyna (Nakai) Businský and Spiraea ×pseudosalicifolia Silverside ‘Triumphans’ are newly combined. Four new hybrid cultivars, Spiraea ‘Green Moundlet’, Spiraea ‘Leafy Carmine’, Spiraea ‘Ludmila’, and Spiraea japonica ‘New Pruhonice’, some cultivated under incorrect names for many years, are described. Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=bulletin_display&id=18253 Businský, Roman, Businská, Ludmila 2002 The genus Spiraea in cultivation in Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia. Acta Pruhoniciana, 72. 169 p.Documents numériques
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Numéro 72 (2002)Adobe Acrobat PDF
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Titre : Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Jiří Sádlo (1958-) ; Brohumil Mandak Année de publication : 2002 Article en page(s) : 97-186 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Géographique] République TchèqueRésumé : Alien flora of the Czech Republic is presented. In Appendix 1, 1378 alien taxa (33.4% of the total flora) are listed with information on the taxonomic position, origin, invasive status (casual, naturalized, invasive; a new category post-invasive is introduced), time of immigration (archaeophytes vs. neophytes), habitat type invaded (natural, seminatural, human-made), vegetation invaded (expressed as occurence in phytosociological alliances), mode of introduction into the country (accidental, deliberate), and date of the first record. Number of phytogeographical as well as biological and ecological attributes were compiled for each species in the database; its structure is presented in Appendix 2 as a suggestion for similar work elsewhere. Czech alien flora consists of 24.1% of taxa which arrived before 1500 (archaeophytes) and 75.9% neophytes. There are 891 casuals, 397 naturalized and 90 invasive species. Of introduced neophytes, 21.9% became naturalized, and 6.6% invasive. Hybrids contribute with 13.3% to the total number of aliens, and the hybridization is more frequent in archaeophytes (18.7%) than in neophytes (11.7%). If the 184 hybrids are excluded from the total number of aliens, there are 270 archaeophytes and 924 neophytes in the Czech flora, i.e. total of 1195 taxa. Accidental arrivals account for 53.4% of all taxa and deliberate introduction for 46.6%; the ratio is reversed for neophytes considered separately (45.5 vs. 54.5%). Majority of aliens (62.8%) are confined to human- made habitats, 11.0% were recorded exclusively in natural or seminatural habitats, and 26.2% occur in both types of habitat. Archaeophytes and neophytes occur in 66 and 83 alliances, respectively, of the phytosociological system. Flora is further analysed with respect to origin, life histories, life forms and strategies. Only 310 species (22.4% of the total number of all alien taxa) are common or locally abundant; others are rare, based on a single locality or no longer present. The following 19 taxa are reported as new for the Czech alien flora: Agrostis scabra, Alhagi pseudalhagi, Allium atropurpureum, Bromus hordeaceus subsp. pseudothominii, Carduus tenuiflorus, Centaurea ×gerstlaueri, Centaurea nigra ×phrygia, Cerastium ×maureri, Gilia capitata, Helianthus strumosus, Hieracium pannosum, Hordeum leporinum, Oenothera coronifera, Papaver atlanticum subsp. mesatlanticum, Parietaria pennsylvanica, Polypogon fugax, Rodgersia aesculifolia, Sedum pallidum var. bithynicum, Sedum stoloniferum; these represent results of our own field research as well as of herbaria search, and unpublished data from colleagues. Other 44 taxa are reported as escaping from cultivation for the first time. Twenty two archaeophytes are listed in the Red List of the Czech flora. Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142018
in Preslia > 74 (2002) . - 97-186Pyšek, Petr, Sádlo, Jiří (1958-), Mandak, Brohumil 2002 Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic. Preslia, 74: 97-186.Documents numériques
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Article (2002)Adobe Acrobat PDF Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns / Petr Pyšek (2012)
Titre : Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Type de document : Tiré à part de revue Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Jiří Danihelka (1968-) ; Jiří Sádlo (1958-) ; Jindrich Chrtek ; Milan Chytrý (1967-) ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Zdenek Kaplan ; František Krahulec ; Lenka Moravcová ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Kateřina Štajerová ; Lubomír Tichý Année de publication : 2012 Importance : 155–255 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Géographique] République TchèqueRésumé : A complete list of all alien taxa ever recorded in the flora of the Czech Republic is presented as an update of the original checklist published in 2002. New data accumulated in the last decade are incorporated and the listing and status of some taxa are reassessed based on improved knowledge. Alien flora of the Czech Republic consists of 1454 taxa listed with information on their taxonomic position, life history, geographic origin (or mode of origin, distinguishing anecophyte and hybrid), invasive status (casual; naturalized but not invasive; invasive), residence time status (archaeophyte vs neophyte), mode of introduction into the country (accidental, deliberate), and date of the first record. Additional information on species performance that was not part of the previous catalogue, i.e. on the width of species’ habitat niches, their dominance in invaded communities, and impact, is provided. The Czech alien flora consists of 350 (24.1%) archaeophytes and 1104 (75.9%) neophytes. The increase in the total number of taxa compared to the previous catalogue (1378) is due to addition of 151 taxa and removal of 75 (39 archaeophytes and 36 neophytes), important part of the latter being the reclassification of 41 taxa as native, mostly based on archaeobotanical evidence. The additions represent taxa newly recorded since 2002 and reported in the national literature; taxa resulting from investigation of sources omitted while preparing the previous catalogue; redetermination of previously reported taxa; reassessment of some taxa traditionally considered native for which the evidence suggests the opposite; and inclusion of intraspecific taxa previously not recognized in the flora. There are 44 taxa on the list that are reported in the present study for the first time as aliens introduced to the Czech Republic or escaped from cultivation: Abies concolor, A. grandis, A. nordmanniana, Avena sterilis subsp. ludoviciana, A. ×vilis, Berberis julianae, B. thunbergii, Bidens ferulifolius, Buddleja alternifolia, Buglossoides incrassata subsp. splitgerberi, Buxus sempervirens, Corispermum declinatum, Cotoneaster dielsianus, C. divaricatus, Euphorbia myrsinites, Gleditsia triacanthos, Helleborus orientalis, Hieracium heldreichii, Koelreuteria paniculata, Lonicera periclymenum, Lotus ornithopodioides, Malus baccata, M. pumila, Miscanthus sacchariflorus, Morus alba, Muscari armeniacum, Paeonia lactiflora, Pennisetum alopecuroides, Pinguicula crystallina subsp. hirtiflora, P. grandiflora subsp. rosea, Podophyllum hexandrum, Pyracantha coccinea, Rhodotypos scandens, Rumex patientia × R. tianschanicus ‘Uteuša’, Salix cordata, Sarracenia purpurea, Sasa palmata ‘Nebulosa’, Scolymus maculatus, Spiraea japonica, Tagetes tenuifolia, Thuja occidentalis, Trifolium badium, Vaccinium corymbosum and Viburnum rhytidophyllum. All added and deleted taxa are commented on. Of the total number of taxa, 985 are classified as casuals, 408 as naturalized but not invasive, and 61 as invasive. The reduction in the number of invasive taxa compared to the previous catalogue is due to a more conservative approach adopted here; only taxa that currently spread are considered invasive. Casual taxa are strongly over-represented among neophytes compared to archaeophytes (76.7% vs 39.4%), while naturalized but non-invasive taxa follow the reversed pattern (18.8% vs 57.4). However, these two groups do not significantly differ in the proportion of invasive taxa. Of introduced neophytes, 250 taxa (22.6%) are considered vanished, i.e. no longer present in the flora, while 23.3% became naturalized, and 4.5% invasive. In addition to the traditional classification based on introduction–naturalization–invasion continuum, taxa were classified into 18 population groups based on their long-term trends in metapopulation dynamics in the country, current state of their populations, and link to the propagule pressure from cultivation. Mapping these population groups onto the unified framework for biological invasions introduced by Blackburn et al. in 2011 made it possible to quantify invasion failures, and boom-and-busts, in the Czech alien flora. Depending on inclusion criteria (whether or not extinct/vanished taxa and hybrids are considered), alien taxa ever recorded in the Czech Republic contribute 29.7–33.1% to the total country’s plant diversity; taking into account only naturalized taxa, a permanent element of the country’s flora, the figure is 14.4–17.5%. Analysis of the dates of the first record, known for 771 neophytes, indicates that alien taxa in the flora have been increasing at a steady pace without any distinct deceleration trend; by extrapolating this data to all 1104 neophytes recorded it is predicted that the projected number would reach 1264 in 2050. Deliberate introduction was involved in 747 cases (51.4%), the remaining 48.6% of taxa are assumed to have arrived by unintentional pathways. Archaeophytes are more abundant in landscapes, occupy on average a wider range of habitat types than neophytes, but reach a lower cover in plant communities. The alien flora is further analysed with respect to representation of genera and families, origin and life history. Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=135312 Pyšek, Petr, Danihelka, Jiří (1968-), Sádlo, Jiří (1958-), Chrtek, Jindrich, Chytrý, Milan (1967-), Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Kaplan, Zdenek, Krahulec, František, Moravcová, Lenka, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Štajerová, Kateřina, Tichý, Lubomír 2012 Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns. Preslia, 84 : 155–255.Exemplaires (1)
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Article (2012)Adobe Acrobat PDF Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 1. / Petr Pyšek in Preslia, 84 (2012)
[article]
Titre : Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 1. Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Jiří Danihelka (1968-) ; Jiří Sádlo (1958-) ; Jindrich Chrtek ; Milan Chytrý (1967-) ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Zdenek Kaplan ; František Krahulec ; Lenka Moravcová ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Kateřina Štajerová ; Lubomír Tichý Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : 3 p. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Géographique] République TchèquePermalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142482
in Preslia > 84 (2012) . - 3 p.Pyšek, Petr, Danihelka, Jiří (1968-), Sádlo, Jiří (1958-), Chrtek, Jindrich, Chytrý, Milan (1967-), Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Kaplan, Zdenek, Krahulec, František, Moravcová, Lenka, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Štajerová, Kateřina, Tichý, Lubomír 2012 Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 1. Preslia, 84: 3 p..Documents numériques
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Appendice 1 (2012)Adobe Acrobat PDF Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 2 / Petr Pyšek in Preslia, 84 (2012)
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Titre : Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 2 Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Jiří Danihelka (1968-) ; Jiří Sádlo (1958-) ; Jindrich Chrtek ; Milan Chytrý (1967-) ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Zdenek Kaplan ; František Krahulec ; Lenka Moravcová ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Kateřina Štajerová ; Lubomír Tichý Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : 2 p. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Géographique] République TchèquePermalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142483
in Preslia > 84 (2012) . - 2 p.Pyšek, Petr, Danihelka, Jiří (1968-), Sádlo, Jiří (1958-), Chrtek, Jindrich, Chytrý, Milan (1967-), Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Kaplan, Zdenek, Krahulec, František, Moravcová, Lenka, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Štajerová, Kateřina, Tichý, Lubomír 2012 Catalogue of alien plants of the Czech Republic (2nd edition) : checklist update, taxonomic diversity and invasion patterns Electronic Appendix 2. Preslia, 84: 2 p..Documents numériques
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Appendice 2 (2012)Adobe Acrobat PDF PermalinkComparison of habitat requirements of the mosses Hamatocaulis vernicosus, Scorpidium cossonii and Warnstorfia exannulata in different parts of temperate Europe / Tana Stechova in Preslia, 80 (2008)
PermalinkConyza triloba, new to Europe, and Conyza bonariensis, new to the Czech Republic / Otakar Sida in Preslia, 75 (2003)
PermalinkCyperus eragrostis : a new alien species for the Czech flora and the history of its invasion of Europe / Petr Petrik in Preslia, 75 (2003)
PermalinkEcological restoration in the Czech Republic / Ivana Jongepierová-Hlobilová (2012)
PermalinkFormalized classification of thermophilous oak forests in the Czech Republic : what brings the Cocktail method ? / Jan Rolecek in Preslia, 79 (2007)
PermalinkGlyceria striata : a new alien grass species in the flora of the Czech Republic / Martin Dancák in Preslia, 74 (2002)
PermalinkMaps of the level of invasion of the Czech Republic by alien plants / Milan Chytrý in Preslia, 81 (2009)
PermalinkNear natural restoration vs. technical reclamation of mining sites in the Czech Republic / Klara Rehounkova (2011)
PermalinkOenothera coronifera, a new alien species for the Czech flora, and Oenothera stricta, recorded again after nearly two centuries / Stanislav Mihulka in Preslia, 75 (2003)
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