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Featured researches published by J. S. Rodwell.


Archive | 2000

British Plant Communities

J. S. Rodwell; C. D. Pigott; D. A. Ratcliffe; A. J. C. Malloch; H. J. B. Birks; M. C. F. Proctor; D. W. Shimwell; J. P. Huntley; E. Radford; M. J. Wiggington; P. Wilkins

British Plant communities , British Plant communities , مرکز فناوری اطلاعات و اطلاع رسانی کشاورزی


Journal of Vegetation Science | 2000

Common data standards for recording releves in field survey for vegetation classification

Ladislav Mucina; J.H.J. Schaminée; J. S. Rodwell

. In the framework of the European Vegetation Survey common data standards are proposed for recording phytosociological releves for syntaxonomical classification. The authors wish to establish the notion that common data standards for recording phytosociological data can only be advantageous for advancing the credibility and application of vegetation science, and may stimulate other projects.


Journal of Vegetation Science | 1993

European Vegetation Survey: Current state of some national programmes

Ladislav Mucina; J. S. Rodwell; J.H.J. Schaminee; H. Dierschke

Vegetation survey programmes in Austria, Great Britain, the Netherlands and Germany are described. The aims of these programmes are discussed and their origin and motivation elucidated against the historical background of the development of phytosociology (as part of vegetation science) in particular countries. The Austrian, British and Dutch national vegetation surveys have been logistically supported by either basic-research (Austria) or nature-conservation (Great Britain and the Netherlands) funding organisations. They are either being published (British Plant Communities) or heading for publication of their first volumes within the next two years. The German vegetation survey is a voluntarily-based enterprise expected to complete its work by the end of this century. The experience gained by the management of these national surveys is of fundamental importance in launching the European Vegetation Survey (a project under preparation)


Landscape Research | 2007

Restructuring the post-industrial landscape: a multifunctional approach

Christopher Ling; John Handley; J. S. Rodwell

Abstract Using the example of the Dearne Valley in South Yorkshire, England, a notion of multifunctionality, and its potential to be utilized in post-industrial regeneration is explored. Multifunctionality is defined as an integration of different functions within the same or overlapping land unit, at the same or overlapping in time, and is a framework whereby a holistic view of a landscape can be examined. The multi-criteria analysis approach to mapping potential in the landscape highlights the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats in this part of post-industrial England. The graphical format enables the elements of the landscape to be identified and this offers potential for a basis of consultation in the process of regeneration. By examining the place of post-industrial sites in the context of the landscape in which they are situated will enable their potential to be realized, rather than viewing them as individual problems. The paper concludes by examining how a concept of multifunctionality can address some of the shortcomings in the current regeneration delivery environment, and suggests that this approach may bring about post-industrial landscapes that are not only new, but better.


Archive | 2016

European Red List of Habitats : Part 2. Terrestrial and freshwater habitats

J. A. M. Janssen; J. S. Rodwell; M. Garcia Criado; S. Gubbay; T. Haynes; Ana Nieto; N. Sanders; Flavia Landucci; Javier Loidi; A. Ssymank; T. Tahvanainen; M. Valderrabano; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; M. Aronsson; G.H.P. Arts; F. Altorre; Erwin Bergmeier; R.J. Bijlsma; F. Bioret; C. Bită-Nicolae; Idoia Biurrun; M. Calix; Jorge Capelo; Andraž Čarni; Milan Chytry; Jürgen Dengler; Panayotis Dimopoulos; F. Essi; H. Gardfjeil; Daniela Gigante

The first ever European Red List of Habitats reviews the current status of all natural and semi-natural terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats and highlights the pressures they face. Using a modified version of the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems categories and criteria, it covers the EU28, plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and the Balkan countries and their neighbouring seas. Over 230 terrestrial and freshwater habitats were assessed. The European Red List of Habitats provides an entirely new and all embracing tool to review commitments for environmental protection and restoration within the EU2020 Biodiversity Strategy. In addition to the assessment of threat, a unique set of information underlies the Red List for every habitat: from a full description to distribution maps, images, links to other classification systems, details of occurrence and trends in each country and lists of threats with information on restoration potential. All of this is publicly available in PDF and database format (see links below), so the Red List can be used for a wide range of analysis. The Red List complements the data collected on Annex I habitat types through Article 17 reporting as it covers a much wider set of habitats than those legally protected under the Habitats Directive.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2017

Formalized classification of European fen vegetation at the alliance level

Tomáš Peterka; Michal Hájek; Martin Jiroušek; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Liene Aunina; Ariel Bergamini; Daniel Dité; Ljuba Felbaba-Klushyna; Ulrich Graf; Petra Hájková; Eva Hettenbergerová; Tatiana G. Ivchenko; Florian Jansen; Natalia Koroleva; Elena D. Lapshina; Pedrag M. Lazarevic; Asbjørn Moen; Maxim G. Napreenko; Paweł Pawlikowski; Zuzana Plesková; Lucia Sekulová; Viktor A. Smagin; Temuu Tahvanainen; Annett Thiele; Claudia Bita-Nicolae; Idoia Biurrun; Henry Brisse; Renata Ćušterevska; Els De Bie; Jörg Ewald

Phytosociological classification of fen vegetation (Scheuchzerio palustris-Caricetea fuscae class) differs among European countries. Here we propose a unified vegetation classification of European fens at the alliance level, provide unequivocal assignment rules for individual vegetation plots, identify diagnostic species of fen alliances, and map their distribution. 29 049 vegetation-plot records of fenswere selected fromdatabases using a list of specialist fen species. Formal definitions of alliances were created using the presence, absence and abundance of Cocktail-based species groups and indicator species. DCA visualized the similarities among the alliances in an ordination space. The ISOPAM classification algorithm was applied to regional subsets with homogeneous plot size to check whether the classification based on formal definitions matches the results of unsupervised classifications. The following alliances were defined: Caricion viridulo-trinervis (sub-halophytic Atlantic dune-slack fens), Caricion davallianae (temperate calcareous fens), Caricion atrofusco-saxatilis (arcto-alpine calcareous fens), Stygio-Caricion limosae (boreal topogenic brown-moss fens), Sphagno warnstorfii-Tomentypnion nitentis (Sphagnumbrown-moss rich fens), Saxifrago-Tomentypnion (continental to boreo-continental nitrogen-limited brown-moss rich fens), Narthecion scardici (alpine fens with Balkan endemics), Caricion stantis (arctic brown-moss rich fens), Anagallido tenellae-Juncion bulbosi (Ibero-Atlantic moderately rich fens), Drepanocladion exannulati (arcto-borealalpine non-calcareous fens), Caricion fuscae (temperate moderately rich fens), Sphagno-Caricion canescentis (poor fens) and Scheuchzerion palustris (dystrophic hollows). The main variation in the species composition of European fens reflected site chemistry (pH, mineral richness) and sorted the plots from calcareous and extremely rich fens, through rich andmoderately rich fens, to poor fens and dystrophic hollows.


Folia Geobotanica Et Phytotaxonomica | 1997

European Vegetation Survey; the context of the case studies

J. S. Rodwell; Ladislav Mucina; Sandro Pignatti; J.H.J. Schaminée; Milan Chytrý

Since 1992, a group of phytosociologists has met each spring in Rome to encourage the development of an overview of the vegetation of Europe. Constituted as an official working group of the International Association for Vegetation Science, the European Vegetation Survey represents a new spirit in phytosociology (PIGNATTI 1990, 1995). At the beginning this initiative was strongly supported by a small group of phytosociologists that were carrying out national vegetation survey programmes in Austria, the Netherlands, Germany, and the UK (GRABHERR & MUCINA 1993, MUCINA et al. 1993a, 1993b, RODWELL 1990, 1991, 1992, 1995, SCHAMINiE et al. 1995a, 1995b, 1996). The realm of interest of the European Vegetation Survey is wider Europe, including eastern Europe, the Aegean and Canary Islands, Iceland and Svalbard, and its aims are to promulgate common data standards in phytosociology, to support national vegetation survey programmes and to develop compatible software and an electronic network for data exchange. Summaries of progress in this enterprise have been published from time to time (MUCINA et al. 1993c, PIGNATrI 1995, RODWELL et al. 1995). An early result of a new national programme was the publication of the first volume of the Slovak national vegetation classification (VALACHOVIC et al. 1995). The Rome workshops themselves provide a forum for regular updates on developments across Europe, an exchange of views on important research programmes and concepts in phytosociology and an opportunity for newcomers to vegetation surveying to receive a welcome and encouragement for their work. In this sense there is a social and political aspect to the meetings, the wider implications of which have already been considerable. Two examples


Applied Vegetation Science | 2018

Biogeographic variability of coastal perennial grasslands at the European scale

S. Del Vecchio; Edy Fantinato; J. A. M. Janssen; F. Bioret; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; Irene Prisco; Rossen Tzonev; Corrado Marcenò; J. S. Rodwell; Gabriella Buffa

Question: Coastal environments have often been described as azonal. While this characteristic is clear for the foredune system, it seems less evident for more inland fixed dunes, which host habitats of major conservation concern, whose features seem to be more related to local climatic conditions. We hypothesized that, unlike other coastal habitats, dune perennial grasslands differ floristically and structurally across their European range and that patterns of variation are linked to the corresponding climate. Location: European coasts (Atlantic Ocean, Baltic, Mediterranean, Black Sea). Methods: We used a large data set of phytosociological releves, representative of coastal grasslands throughout their European range. The role of climatic variables (temperature, precipitation and continentality) in determining the variability in species composition and vegetation structure (by means of life forms) was investigated through CCA, DCA and GLM. The degree of concentration of species occurrences within groups was calculated through the Phi coefficient. Results: Through multivariate analyses we identified seven major types of coastal grassland, corresponding to different geographic areas. The groups significantly differed in their climatic envelope, as well as in their species composition and community structure. Conclusion: Our results confirm the hypothesis that coastal dune perennial grasslands are subjected to local climate, which exerts significant effects on both floristic composition and community structure. As a consequence, coastal grasslands are particularly prone to the effect of possible climate change, which may alter species composition and distribution, and lead to shifts in the distribution of native plant communities.


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2018

Phytosociological relationships in European Union policy-related habitat classifications

J. S. Rodwell; Doug Evans; J.H.J. Schaminée

Over the past half century, nature protection in the European Union has been increasingly controlled by commitments to policy and legislative frames, notably the Habitats Directive, originating from the European Union and adopted by an enlarging constituency of member states. Habitat (or biotope) classifications developed in association with these policies, first the Palaearctic habitat classification and CORINE, then the EUNIS habitat classification, have provided typologies with definitions of habitat types intended to aid their recognition, mapping, protection and monitoring. Phytosociological expertise and classifications of formally defined plant communities or syntaxa have played a part in the development of these typologies and in interpretation of the Habitats Directive from the start, though this involvement has been complex and sometimes unclear. This paper catalogues this history and shows how the development of increasingly robust definitions of EUNIS habitat types, an overarching European framework of phytosociological syntaxa and very substantial point-source data (relevés) are converging to aid the interpretation and delivery of environmental policy. In particular, crosswalks between EUNIS habitat types and syntaxa, lists of constant, differential and dominant species, standardised habitat descriptions as well as distribution, predictive and indicative maps are now becoming available. The European Red List of Habitats, also based on the EUNIS typology, provides images and other complementary information on distribution, pressures and threats and a Red List assessment. A comprehensive factsheet with complementary fuller environmental parameterisation for each EUNIS habitat type remains a realistic goal.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2018

Classification of European and Mediterranean coastal dune vegetation

Corrado Marcenò; Riccardo Guarino; Javier Loidi; Mercedes Herrera; Maike Isermann; Ilona Knollová; Lubomír Tichý; Rossen Tzonev; Alicia Teresa Rosario Acosta; Úna FitzPatrick; Dmytro Iakushenko; J. A. M. Janssen; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Zygmunt Kacki; Iva Keizer-Sedláková; Vitaliy Kolomiychuk; J. S. Rodwell; J.H.J. Schaminée; Urban Šilc; Milan Chytrý

Aims: Although many phytosociological studies have provided detailed local and regional descriptions of coastal dune vegetation, a unified classification of this vegetation in Europe and the Mediterranean Basin has been missing. Our aim is to produce a formalized classification of this vegetation and to identify the main factors driving its plant species composition at a continental scale. LocationAtlantic and Baltic coasts of Europe, Mediterranean Basin and the Black Sea region. - Methods: We compiled a database of 30,759 plots of coastal vegetation, which were resampled to reduce unbalanced sampling effort, obtaining a data set of 11,769 plots. We classified these plots with TWINSPAN, interpreted the resulting clusters and used them for developing formal definitions of phytosociological alliances of coastal dune vegetation, which were included in an expert system for automatic vegetation classification. We related the alliances to climatic factors and described their biogeographic features and their position in the coastal vegetation zonation. We examined and visualized the floristic relationships among these alliances by means of DCA ordination. - Results: We defined 18 alliances of coastal dune vegetation, including the newly described Centaureo cuneifoliae-Verbascion pinnatifidi from the Aegean region. The main factors underlying the differentiation of these alliances were biogeographic and macroclimatic contrasts between the Atlantic-Baltic, Mediterranean and Black Sea regions, along with ecological differences between shifting and stable dunes. The main difference in species composition was between the Atlantic-Baltic and Mediterranean-Black Sea regions. Within the former region, the main difference was driven by the different ecological conditions between shifting and stable dunes, whereas within the latter, the main difference was biogeographic between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. - Conclusions: The first formal classification of the European coastal dune vegetation was established, accompanied by an expert system containing the formal definitions of alliances, which can be applied to new data sets. The new classification system critically revised the previous concepts and integrated them into a consistent framework, which reflects the main gradients in species composition driven by biogeographic influences, macroclimate and the position of the sites in the coast-inland zonation of the dune systems. A revision of the class concept used in EuroVegChecklist is also proposed.

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J.H.J. Schaminee

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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J.H.J. Schaminée

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Ladislav Mucina

University of Western Australia

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S.M. Hennekens

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Sandro Pignatti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Idoia Biurrun

University of the Basque Country

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Henry Brisse

Aix-Marseille University

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