Beáta Papp
Hungarian Natural History Museum
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Featured researches published by Beáta Papp.
Journal of Bryology | 2012
L. T. Ellis; Halina Bednarek-Ochyra; Ryszard Ochyra; B Cykowska; M V Dulin; Tülay Ezer; Recep Kara; J. R. Flores; Guillermo M. Suárez; C. Garcia; A. Martins; Cecília Sérgio; Ricardo Garilleti; Mesut Kirmaci; E. Agcagil; L E Kurbatova; Marc Lebouvier; Beáta Papp; D A Philippov; Vítězslav Plášek; Tamás Pócs; Marko Sabovljevic; Jakub Sawicki; Manuela Sim-Sim; P Szücs; András Bidló; J. Váňa; Beatriz Vigalondo; Francisco Lara; Isabel Draper
ub lis he d by M an ey P ub lis hi ng ( c) B rit is h B ry ol og ic al S oc ie ty Bryological Note New national and regional bryophyte records, 33 L T Ellis, H Bednarek-Ochyra, R Ochyra, B Cykowska, M V Dulin, T Ezer, R Kara, J R Flores, G M Suarez, C Garcia, A Martins, C Sergio, R Garilleti, M Kirmaci, E Agcagil, L E Kurbatova, M Lebouvier, B Papp, E Szurdoki, D A Philippov, V Plasek, T Pocs, M Sabovljevic, J Sawicki, M Sim-Sim, P Szucs, A Bidlo, J Vaňa, B Vigalondo, F Lara, I Draper, V M Virchenko, G J Wolski Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, UK, Laboratory of Bryology, Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Krakow, Poland, Institute of Biology, Komi Science Centre UB RAS, Komi, Russia, Nigde University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology, Nigde, Turkey, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e Institucion Miguel Lillo, Tucuman, Argentina, Universidade de Lisboa, Museu Nacional de Historia Natural e da Ciencia, Lisboa, Portugal, Departamento de Botanica, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Valencia, Burjasot, Spain, Adnan Menderes Universitesi, Fen Edebiyat Fakultesi, Biyoloji Bolumu, Kepez-Aydin, Turkey, Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, CNRS UMR 6553, Universite de Rennes 1, France, Botanical Department, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary, 12 I.D. Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Water RAS, Nekouz, Russia, Department of Biology and Ecology, University of Ostrava, Czech Republic, Department of Botany, Eszterhazy Karoly College, Hungary, Institute of Botany and Botanical Garden, Faculty of Biology, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Department of Botany and Nature Protection, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland, Museu Nacional de Historia Natural, Jardim Botânico, Lisboa, Portugal, Department of Forest Site Diagnosis and Classification, University of West Hungary, Sopron, Hungary, Department of Botany, Charles University, Praha, Czech Republic, Departamento de Biologia (Botanica), Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain, Department of Lichenology and Bryology, Institute of Botany, National Academy of Sciences of the Ukraine, Kiev, Ukraine, Deptartment of Geobotany and Plant Ecology, University of Łodź, Poland
Journal of Bryology | 2012
L. T. Ellis; Halina Bednarek-Ochyra; B Cykowska; Ryszard Ochyra; C. Garcia; Cecília Sérgio; Marc Lebouvier; P Manolaki; E Giannouris; C Kadis; Ivana Marková; Beáta Papp; Denilson Fernandes Peralta; Vítězslav Plášek; R. Ristow; Marko Sabovljevic; Manuela Sim-Sim; V R Smith; Evdoxia Tsakiri; Jiří Váňa; V M Virchenko; O O Barsukov
ub lis he d by M an ey P ub lis hi ng ( c) B rit is h B ry ol og ic al S oc ie ty Bryological Notes New national and regional bryophyte records, 30 L T Ellis, H Bednarek-Ochyra, B Cykowska, R Ochyra, C Garcia, C Sergio, M Lebouvier, P Manolaki, E Giannouris, C Kadis, I Markova, B Papp, E. Szurdoki, D F Peralta, V Plasek, R Ristow, M Sabovljevic, M Sim-Sim, V R Smith, E Tsakiri, J Vaňa, V M Virchenko, O O Barsukov Department of Botany, The Natural History Museum, London, UK, Laboratory of Bryology, Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland, Universidade de Lisboa, Museu Nacional de Historia Natural, Jardim Botânico and Centro de Biologia Ambiental, Rua, Lisboa, Portugal, CNRS UMR 6553, Universite de Rennes 1, France, Department of Biology, University of Patras, Greece, Bohemian Switzerland National Park Administration, Pražska 52, CZ-407 46 Krasna Lipa, Czech Republic, Botany Department, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary, Instituto de Botânica, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Department of Biology and Ecology, University of Ostrava, Czech Republic, Parque da Ciencia Newton Freire Maia, Pinhais, Parana, Brazil, Faculty of Biology, Institute of Botany and Botanical Garden, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Universidade de Lisboa, Departamento de Biologia Vegetal/Centro de Biologia Ambiental, Faculdade de Ciencias da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal, Department of Botany, University of Stellenbosch, Republic of South Africa, Department of Botany, School of Biology, Aristotle University, Thessaloniki, Greece, Department of Botany, Charles University, Czech Republic, Department of Lichenology and Bryology, Institute of Botany, National Academy of Sciences of the Ukraine, Kiev, Ukraine
Journal of Bryology | 2011
L. T. Ellis; Halina Bednarek-Ochyra; Ryszard Ochyra; Silvia C. Aranda; Maria T. Colotti; Maria M Schiavone; M V Dulin; P. Erzberger; Tülay Ezer; Recep Kara; Rosalina Gabriel; Lars Hedenäs; David T. Holyoak; Péter Ódor; Beáta Papp; Marko Sabovljevic; R. Seppelt; V R Smith; André Sotiaux; Alain Vanderpoorten; J. van Rooy; J. Żarnowiec
26 L T Ellis, H Bednarek-Ochyra, R Ochyra, Silvia Calvo Aranda, Maria T Colotti, Maria M Schiavone, Michail V Dulin, P Erzberger, Tulay Ezer, Recep Kara, Rosalina Gabriel, Lars Hedenas, David T Holyoak, P Odor, B Papp, M Sabovljevic, R D Seppelt, V R Smith, Andre Sotiaux, E Szurdoki, Alain Vanderpoorten, J van Rooy, J Żarnowiec Department of Botany, The Natural History Museum, UK, Laboratory of Bryology, Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Krakow, Poland, 3 Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biologia Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, Madrid, Spain, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e IML, San Miguel de Tucuman, Argentina, Institute of Biology Komi Science Centre UB RAS, Syktyvkar, Komi Republic, Russia, Belziger Str. 37, D-10823 Berlin, Germany, Faculty of Science and Arts, Department of Biology, Nigde University, Turkey, Departamento de Ciencias Agrarias, Universidade dos Acores, Angra do Heroismo, Portugal, Department of Cryptogamic Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden, Quinta da Cachopa, Barcoila, Cabecudo, Portugal, Department of Plant Taxonomy and Ecology, Lorand Eotvos University, Budapest, Hungary, Botanical Department, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary, Institute of Botany and Botanical Garden, Faculty of Biology, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, Tasmania, Australia, Department of Botany, University of Stellenbosch, Matieland, South Africa, National Botanic Garden of Belgium, Domein van Bouchout, Meise, Belgium, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary, University of Liege, Institute of Botany, Belgium, National Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria, South Africa, Department of Ecology and Nature Conservation, Institute of Environmental Protection and Engineering, University of Bielsko-Biala, Poland
Journal of Bryology | 2014
L. T. Ellis; Michele Aleffi; A. K. Asthana; A. Srivastava; Vadim A. Bakalin; N. Batan; T. Özdemir; H. Bednarek-Ochyra; E. A. Borovichev; Montserrat Brugués; María J. Cano; S. S. Choi; D. De Beer; Jan Eckstein; P. Erzberger; Anna Ganeva; Rayna Natcheva; C. Garcia; Cecília Sérgio; Ricardo Garilleti; Belén Albertos; Felisa Puche; S. Gücel; M. Higuchi; Vincent Hugonnot; Kristoffer Hylander; Mesut Kirmaci; G. Aslan; T. Koponen; Francisco Lara
1. Aneura pseudopinguis (Herzog) PocsContributor: K. HylanderEthiopia: Kaffa, Bonga, Gimbo, Meligawa, Barta forest, 3 km ENE of Bonga, moist Afromontane forest, among other bryophytes on dead wood,...
Journal of Bryology | 2014
L. T. Ellis; Michele Aleffi; R. Tacchi; Antun Alegro; Marta Alonso; A. K. Asthana; Vinay Sahu; A. B. Biasuso; D. A. Callaghan; Tülay Ezer; Recep Kara; T. Seyli; Ricardo Garilleti; M. J. Gil-López; D. Gwynne-Evans; Terry A. Hedderson; Thomas Kiebacher; J. Larraín; David G. Long; M. Lüth; B. Malcolm; Yuriy S. Mamontov; K. K. Newsham; Marcin Nobis; Arkadiusz Nowak; Ryszard Ochyra; Paweł Pawlikowski; Vítězslav Plášek; L. Číhal; A. D. Potemkin
Dicranum spurium has been recorded for the first time in Croatia. In neighbouring countries it is known from Italy, Slovenia, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro (Cortini Pedrotti, 1992 ; Sabovljevic´ et al., 2008 ; Papp et al., 2010). In Hungary, it is treated as VU (vulnerable) (Papp et al., 2010), in Montenegro as DD (data-deficient) (Sabovljevic´ et al., 2004), and further in the Balkans as EN (endangered) in Romania (Stefanut¸ & Goia, 2012). Dicranum spurium was found on Papuk Mountain (northeastern Croatia). Ninety-five per cent of Papuk Mountain is covered by forest vegetation, the yearly mean temperature is between 8 and 11C, and annual precipitation varies between 800 and 1300 mm. Almost the whole of the mountain is protected as a Nature Park. The locality in Svinjarevac where D. spurium occurred is beech forest (Fagus sylvatica L.), unique in Croatia, with a dense cover of Sphagnum quinquefarium (Braithw.) Warnst. on the forest floor. The bedrock is quartzite and gneiss, sloping between 35 and 45, and exposed to the northwest. This Fagus-Sphagnum quinquefarium forest was spread over 2.4 ha., with a poorly developed layer of herbaceous plants. Sphagnum platyphyllum was recorded during an extensive survey of spruce forests throughout Croatia. It was found in Stirovaca, a plateau in the central part of Velebit Mountain. The locality for this first record of S. platyphyllum for Croatia is just near the border of the Northern Velebit National Park (The whole Velebit Mountain is protected as a Nature Park). According to Dull et al. (1999), Sabovljevic (2006), and Sabovljevic et al. (2008), the species has not been recorded from Croatia, although it is known to occur in neighbouring countries: Italy, Slovenia, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia (Cortini Pedrotti, 1992 ; Sabovljevic et al., 2008 ; Papp et al., 2010). In many of these countries, it is red listed: as VU (vulnerable) in Hungary, Slovenia, and Serbia (Martincicc, 1992 ; Sabovljevic et al., 2004 ; Papp et al., 2010) and further in the Balkans as NT (near threatened) in Romania (Stefanut & Goia, 2012). This part of Velebit Mountain is characterized by cool and long winters, with 1900 mm average annual precipitation and an average annual temperature of 3.5C. The natural vegetation consists of beech-fir and spruce forests and some of the forest stands are still primeval. Sphagnum platyphyllum occurred in a wet spruce (Picea abies (L.) H.Karst.) forest, where it grew in dense carpets covering the forest floor and the banks of shallow depressions (ca 100 m2) filled with water. The collection site in Stirovaca is the only known locality for this unique spruce forest community with peat mosses in Croatia. Sphagnum teres was found at two localities in Croatia, in or near the National Park Plitvicka jezera lakes, but in different habitats within the belt of beech-fir forests. The climate is moderately temperate, with 1500 mm annual precipitation and an average temperature of 7.9C. This is the first record of this species for Croatia, although in the neighbouring countries, it is known from Italy, Slovenia, Hungary and Serbia, and further to the south-east, in FYR Macedonia, Bulgaria and Greece (Papp et al., 2010 ; Sabovljevic et al., 2008). S. teres has been recently recorded as new for Albania (Marka & Sabovljevic, 2011), Bosnia- Herzegovina (Sabovljevic´ et al., 2010) and Montenegro (Martincic, 2006), and is red listed as CR (critically endangered) in Hungary (Papp et al., 2010), and as VU (vulnerable) in Serbia (Sabovljevic et al., 2004). The first locality, Ljeskovacˇke bare, is within the National Park Plitvicka jezera lakes. Here, the species occurred in transitional peat bog belonging to the community Drosero-Caricetum echinatae and occupying an area of ca 1 ha., S. teres was the dominant Sphagnum species. Sphagnum squarrosum Crome, S. palustre L., S. centrale C.E.O.Jensen and S. flexuosum Dozy & Molk. were also relatively abundant. The bog is wet throughout the year, but mostly without open water. Depending on the amount of precipitation, it can be flooded during winter and spring. The bog is not shaded ; it is completely exposed to the sun, but partially overgrown by Molinia coerulea Moench, which is mowed in the management of the Park. Some other species characteristic for this site were Drosera rotundifolia L., Carex echinata Murray, C. lasiocarpa Ehrh., and Menyanthes trifoliata L. The second locality, Vrhovinsko polje, is situated near the eastern border of Plitvicˇka jezera lakes National Park. It is a typical karst field, with the lowest, central part periodically flooded during winter and early spring. It is covered with grassland vegetation of different communities reflecting gradients of water and soil pH. The flora was very rich. In the lowest part of the field were several shallow depressions with a perimeter of 10–20 m overgrown by sedges, mostly Carex vesicaria L. On the edges of these depressions were scattered peat moss hummocks of Sphagnum palustre L., S. capillifolium (Ehrh.) Hedw., and S. subnitens Russow & Warnst. Among them, S. teres (Schimp.) Angstr. also occured, but in much lower abundance.
Journal of Bryology | 2009
T. L. Blockeel; Halina Bednarek-Ochyra; Ryszard Ochyra; B Cykowska; M.G. Esquível; Marc Lebouvier; Leena Luís; Soraia Martins; Frank Müller; Cs. Németh; Beáta Papp; Vítězslav Plášek; Tamás Pócs; Marko Sabovljevic; Cecília Sérgio; Manuela Sim-Sim; Michael Stech; Jiří Váňa; Ozlem Tonguc Yayintas
Beever J, Fife AJ. 2008. Hypnobartlettia fontana is an environmental form of Cratoneuropsis relaxa (Bryophyta: Amblystegiaceae). New Zealand Journal of Botany 46: 341–345. Crum HA, Anderson LE. 1981. Mosses of Eastern North America. New York: Columbia University Press. Guindon S, Lethiec F, Duroux P, Gascuel O. 2005. PHYML Online – a web server for fast maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic inference. Nucleic Acids Research 3: W557–W559. Hedenäs L. 1997. A partial generic revision of Campylium (Musci). Bryologist 100: 65–88. Hedenäs L. 2003. Amblystegiaceae (Musci). Flora Neotropicana Monograph 89: 1–107. Hedenäs L, Geissler P. 1999. Lectotypification of Hedwig names: holarctic pleurocarpous mosses. Candollea 54: 417–432. Hedwig J. 1797. Descriptio et adumbratio microscopico-analytica muscorum frondosorum. Vol. 4. Lipsiae: Müller. Hill MO, Bell N, Bruggeman-Nannenga MA, Brugués M, Cano MJ, Enroth J, Flatberg KI, Frahm JP, Gallego MT, Garilleti R, Guerra J, Hedenäs L, Holyoak DT, Hyvönen J, Ignatov MS, Lara F, Mazimpaka V, Muñoz J, Söderström L. 2006. An annotated checklist of the mosses of Europe and Macaronesia. Journal of Bryology 28: 198–267. Vanderpoorten A. 2004. A simple taxonomic treatment for a complicated evolutionary story: the genus Hygroamblystegium (Hypnales, Amblystegiaceae). Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden 98: 320–327. Vanderpoorten A, Goffinet B, Hedenäs L, Cox CJ, Shaw AJ. 2003. A taxonomic reassessment of the Vittiaceae (Hypnales, Bryopsida): evidence from phylogenetic analyses of combined chloroplast and nuclear sequence data. Plant Systematics and Evolution 241: 1–12. Vanderpoorten A, Hedenäs L, Cox CJ, Shaw AJ. 2002. Circumscription, phylogenetic relationships and taxonomy of Amblystegiaceae inferred from nr and cpDNA sequence data and morphology. Taxon 51: 115–122.
Journal of Bryology | 2015
L. T. Ellis; Antun Alegro; Vedran Šegota; Vadim A. Bakalin; Rossella Barone; E. A. Borovichev; Vincent Hugonnot; Marc Lebouvier; Marcin Nobis; Arkadiusz Nowak; Ryszard Ochyra; Beáta Papp; Renata Piwowarczyk; Vítězslav Plášek; L. Číhal; Z.-J. Ren; Marko Sabovljevic; Cecília Sérgio; C. Garcia; I. Melo; Jakub Sawicki; Adam Stebel; S. Ştefaˇnuţ; R. Ion; A. Manole; I. Tziortzis; Yuanxin Xiong; Z.-T. Zhao
Syntrichia norvegica is a circumpolar arctic- montane species (Smith, 2004), rare at lower altitudes and in southern Europe (Frey et al., 2006). It is known from several south-eastern European countries (Sabovljevic et al., 2008) and now it is recorded for the first time in Croatia. Regarding its conservation status, S. norvegica is red listed in Great Britain (EN), Czech Republic (CR), Slovakia (VU), Bulgaria (NT), Hungary (DD), Romania (VU) and Estonia (VU) (Hodgetts, 2014). It was found in the northern Velebit Mountains, in an area with the most outstanding and extreme karst relief, with steep slopes, perpendicular rocks, screes and deep dolines. The locality is situated in the Pinus mugo Turra belt, but owing to its position in the shaded bottom of a deep, funnel-shaped doline with slopes inclined at more than 70u, the zonal vegetation is replaced by frigoriphilous communities. The main community on the very bottom is Drepanoclado uncinati-Heliospermetum pusillae Surina & Vres 2004, which encompasses many species of cold habitats characterized by long-lasting snow cover, e.g. Saxifraga sedoides L. subsp. prenja (Beck) Beck (glacial relict in the Velebit), Heliosperma pusillum (Waldst. & Kit.) Rchb., Polygonum viviparum L., Myosotis alpestris F.W.Schmidt, Poa alpina L. and Festuca nitida Kit. This community was spread over ca 250 m2 and was bordered by low shrubs of Salix waldsteiniana Willd., which form another frigoriphilous community Salicetum waldsteinianae Beger 1922. In the moss flora, another arctic- montane species, Cyrtomnium hymenophylloides (Huebener) T.J.Kop., is very abundant, and this is the only known locality in Croatia (Blockeel et al., 2009c). Further bryophytes that were present include Sanionia uncinata (Hedw.) Loeske, Orhothecium rufescens (Dicks. ex Brid.) Schimp., Campylium protensum (Brid.) Kindb., Campylophyllum halleri (Hedw.) M.Fleisch., Sciuro-hypnum reflexum (Starke) Ignatov & Huttunen, Platydictya jungermannioides (Brid.) H.A.Crum, Hypnum bambergeri Schimp., Plagiopus oederianus (Sw.) H.A.Crum & L.E.Anderson, and Plagiochilla porelloides (Torr. ex Nees) Lindenb. among others. The population of S. norvegica was vigorous, forming dozens of dense patches of several dm2 on rocks and among other bryophytes and herbs. Plants were typically developed, deep green, with long, reddish leaf points, but capsules were not found.
Willdenowia | 2007
P. Erzberger; Beáta Papp
Abstract Erzberger, P. & Papp, B.: New and noteworthy bryophyte records from Montenegro and Serbia. — Willdenowia 37: 339–351. — ISSN 0511-9618;
Journal of Bryology | 2011
L. T. Ellis; A. K. Asthana; Vinay Sahu; P Bansal; Virendra Nath; P. Erzberger; Tomas Hallingbäck; M Infante; P Lazarević; Leena Luís; Rafael Medina; Ryszard Ochyra; N. Pande; Beáta Papp; Vítězslav Plášek; Marko Sabovljevic; Jakub Sawicki; Manuela Sim-Sim; Adam Stebel; Guillermo M. Suárez; J. van Rooy; Nonkululo Phephu
ub lis he d by M an ey P ub lis hi ng ( c) B rit is h B ry ol og ic al S oc ie ty Bryological Note New national and regional bryophyte records, 27 L T Ellis, A K Asthana, Vinay Sahu, P Bansal, V Nath, P Erzberger, T Hallingback, M Infante, P Lazarevic, L Luis, R Medina, R Ochyra, N Pande, B Papp, V Plasek, M Sabovljevic, J Sawicki, M Sim-Sim, A Stebel, G M Suarez, J van Rooy, N Phephu Department of Botany, The Natural History Museum, London, UK, Bryology Laboratory, National Botanical Research Institute, Lucknow, India, Belziger Str. 37, Berlin, Germany, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden, Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Alava, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain, Institute for Nature Conservation of Serbia, Belgrade, Serbia, Faculdade de Ciencias de Lisboa, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal, Instituto Piaget, Campus Universitario de Santo Andre, Portugal, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain, Laboratory of Bryology, Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Krakow, Poland, Department of Botany, Kumaun University, Nainital, India, Botanical Department, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary, Department of Biology and Ecology, University of Ostrava, Czech Republic, Faculty of Biology, Institute of Botany and Botanical Garden, University of Belgrade, Serbia, Deparment of Botany and Nature Protection, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland, Museu Nacional de Historia Natural, Lisboa, Portugal, Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Medical University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales, Fundacion Miguel Lillo, Tucuman, Argentina, National Herbarium, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria, South Africa
Journal of Bryology | 2013
Beáta Papp; Antun Alegro; Vedran Šegota; Irena Šapić; Joso Vukelić
In the paper 21 new bryophyte species for the flora of Croatia are presented. They originate from three regions in Croatia: Papuk Mt, Velebit Mt and Gorski kotar. For each species exact localities, habitats, and other data concerning conservation status, general distribution and distribution in the Balkans are provided.