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Auteur Wolf Bernhard Dickoré (1959-) |
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Cold spots in the highest mountains of the world- diversity patterns and gradients in the flora of the karakorum / Wolf Bernhard Dickoré (2002)
Titre : Cold spots in the highest mountains of the world- diversity patterns and gradients in the flora of the karakorum Type de document : Extrait d'ouvrage Auteurs : Wolf Bernhard Dickoré (1959-) ; Georg Miehe Année de publication : 2002 Importance : p. 129-148 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Biodiversité Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84947 Dickoré, Wolf Bernhard (1959-), Miehe, Georg 2002 Cold spots in the highest mountains of the world- diversity patterns and gradients in the flora of the karakorum. In: Mountain biodiversity : a global assesment. The Parthenon publishing group, Londres: 129-148.Species of Cotoneaster (Rosaceae, Maloideae) indigenous to, naturalising or commonly cultivated in Central Europe / Wolf Bernhard Dickoré in Willdenowia, 40 (1) (2010)
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Titre : Species of Cotoneaster (Rosaceae, Maloideae) indigenous to, naturalising or commonly cultivated in Central Europe Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Wolf Bernhard Dickoré (1959-) ; Gerwin Kasperek Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : 13-45 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Mots-clés : Cotoneaster Medik., 1789 Résumé : Several alien species of the Eurasian genus Cotoneaster are naturalising in Central Europe, apparently increasingly so, and some on a massive scale. They presumably originate from large-scale cultivation for ground cover, hedges or as ornamental shrubs. The present paper keys and synopses the Cotoneaster species indigenous to, naturalising or commonly cultivated in Central Europe, on the basis of, relatively limited, both living (wild, adventive and cultivated) and herbarium material. An attempt is made to understand the nature of variation from the genus' centre of diversification, the mountains of China and the Himalayas, which are likewise the origin of most cultivated and naturalising Cotoneaster species. Taxonomic and nomenclatural problems, putatively relating to the presence of apomixis and hybridization in the genus, are discussed. Many of the more than 500 published binomials, including a substantial proportion of those based on cultivated material, seem to be poorly defined, both morphologically and chorologically. Of an estimated total of only 50–70 Cotoneaster species worldwide, about 20, mainly Chinese species have been found escaping from cultivation in Central Europe. Presently, about ten species must be considered fully naturalised and, locally at least, invasive.
Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.3372/wi.40.40102 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142750
in Willdenowia > 40 (1) (2010) . - 13-45Dickoré, Wolf Bernhard (1959-), Kasperek, Gerwin 2010 Species of Cotoneaster (Rosaceae, Maloideae) indigenous to, naturalising or commonly cultivated in Central Europe. Willdenowia, 40(1): 13-45.Exemplaires (1)
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