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1 July 2013 Analyse de la Flore des Alpes. 5: Milieux et Phytosociologie
David Aeschimann, Nathalie Rasolofo, Jean-Paul Theurillat
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Abstract

Aeschimann, D., N. Rasolofo & J.-P. Theurillat (2013). Analysis of the flora of the Alps. 5: habitats and phytosociology. Candollea 68: 5–27. In French, English and French abstracts.

Last in a series, this paper concludes the statistical analysis of the data published in «Flora alpina», treating that which concerns habitats and phytosociology. Expressed as percentages, the results concerning the flora are envisaged globally, by vegetation belt, by administrative division, by floristic contingent, by family, by genus and by biological form. More than 81% of endemics are found in rocky habitats, a proportion that increases with altitude, from 39% to 97% between the colline and the nival belts. Very stenoecious, 27% of the endemic taxa are exclusive of one of the major habitats, while this percentage drops to 16% among non-endemic indigenous taxa. Xenophytes are very nitrophilous: 95% of them are present in these, often anthropogenic, habitats and more than 38% are exclusive of them. Phytosociology confirms the stenoecity of endemics, as well as most of the other trends that are strongly correlated but not parallel. Cartographic patterns of four sub-alliances endemic to the Alps are provided: Physoplexido-Potentillenion, Saxifragenion lingulatae, Saxifragenion pedemontanae and Caricenion austroalpinae. The presence of many endemic taxa in these syntaxa, some narrowly stenoecious, justifies their phytosociological individualization.

© CONSERVATOIRE ET JARDIN BOTANIQUES DE GENÈVE 2013
David Aeschimann, Nathalie Rasolofo, and Jean-Paul Theurillat "Analyse de la Flore des Alpes. 5: Milieux et Phytosociologie," Candollea 68(1), 5-27, (1 July 2013). https://doi.org/10.15553/c2013v681a1
Received: 3 September 2012; Accepted: 15 October 2012; Published: 1 July 2013
KEYWORDS
Alpine arc
Biological forms
Flora of the Alps
floristics
habitats
phytosociology
Vegetation belts
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