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Dive into the research topics where János Csiky is active.

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Featured researches published by János Csiky.


International Journal of Speleology | 2014

The conservation value of karst dolines for vascular plants in woodland habitats of Hungary: refugia and climate change

Zoltán Bátori; János Csiky; Tünde Farkas; E. Anna Vojtkó; László Erdős; Dániel Kovács; Tamás Wirth; László Körmöczi; András Vojtkó

Limestone (karst) surfaces in Hungary are rich in dolines, in which many endangered vascular plant species occur. To date, the majority of studies dealing with doline vegetation have focused on the local rather than the landscape level, without using comparative data from other areas. However, in this study we aimed to compare the vegetation pattern and species composition of dolines under different climate regimes of Hungary with regard to regional species pools. The fieldwork was carried out between 2005 and 2012. Twenty dolines were selected in the Mecsek Mountains (southern Hungary) and nine dolines in the Aggtelek Karst area (northern Hungary). More than 900 vascular plants and more than 2000 plots were included in the study. The moving split window (MSW) technique, nestedness analysis and principal coordinates analysis (PCoA) were used to reveal the vegetation patterns in dolines. Although we found remarkable differences between the species composition of the two regions, dolines of both regions play a similar role in the preservation of different groups of species. Many plants, in particular mountain species, are restricted to the bottom of dolines where appropriate environmental conditions exist. In addition, depending on the doline geometry, many species of drier and warmer forests have colonized the upper slopes and rims. Thus, we can conclude that karst dolines of Hungary can be considered as reservoirs for many vascular plant species, therefore they are particularly important from a conservation point of view. Moreover, these dolines will likely become increasingly indispensable refugia for biodiversity under future global warming. Aggtelek Karst area; global warming; Mecsek Mountains; relict species; transects


Journal of Cave and Karst Studies | 2012

IMPORTANCE OF KARST SINKHOLES IN PRESERVING RELICT, MOUNTAIN, AND WET-WOODLAND PLANT SPECIES UNDER SUB-MEDITERRANEAN CLIMATE: A CASE STUDY FROM SOUTHERN HUNGARY

Zoltán Bátori; László Körmöczi; László Erdôs; Márta Zalatnai; János Csiky

Species composition and the vegetation pattern of the understory were investigated in different sized solution sinkholes in a woodland area of the Mecsek Mountains (southern Hungary). Vegetation data together with topographic variables were collected along transects to reveal the vegetation patterns on the slopes, and a species list was compiled for each sinkhole. The results indicate that the vegetation pattern significantly correlates with sinkhole size. In smaller sinkholes, vegetation does not change substantially along the transects; in larger sinkholes, however, vegetation inversion is pronounced. We also found that sinkhole size clearly influences the number of vascular plant species, in accordance with the well-known relationship between species number and area. In the forest landscape, many medium-sized and large sinkholes have developed into excellent refuge areas for glacial relicts, mountain, and wet-woodland plant species.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2017

A higher‐level classification of the Pannonian and western Pontic steppe grasslands (Central and Eastern Europe)

Wolfgang Willner; Anna Kuzemko; Jürgen Dengler; Milan Chytrý; Norbert Bauer; Thomas Becker; Claudia Bita-Nicolae; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Andraz Carni; János Csiky; Ruzica Igic; Zygmunt Kacki; Iryna Korotchenko; Matthias Kropf; Mirjana Krstivojevic-Cuk; Daniel Krstonošić; Tamás Rédei; Eszter Ruprecht; Luise Schratt-Ehrendorfer; Yuri Semenishchenkov; Zvjezdana Stančić; Yulia Vashenyak; Denys Vynokurov; Monika Janišová

Abstract Questions What are the main floristic patterns in the Pannonian and western Pontic steppe grasslands? What are the diagnostic species of the major subdivisions of the class Festuco‐Brometea (temperate Euro‐Siberian dry and semi‐dry grasslands)? Location Carpathian Basin (E Austria, SE Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Slovenia, N Croatia and N Serbia), Ukraine, S Poland and the Bryansk region of W Russia. Methods We applied a geographically stratified resampling to a large set of relevés containing at least one indicator species of steppe grasslands. The resulting data set of 17 993 relevés was classified using the TWINSPAN algorithm. We identified groups of clusters that corresponded to the class Festuco‐Brometea. After excluding relevés not belonging to our target class, we applied a consensus of three fidelity measures, also taking into account external knowledge, to establish the diagnostic species of the orders of the class. The original TWINSPAN divisions were revised on the basis of these diagnostic species. Results The TWINSPAN classification revealed soil moisture as the most important environmental factor. Eight out of 16 TWINSPAN groups corresponded to Festuco‐Brometea. A total of 80, 32 and 58 species were accepted as diagnostic for the orders Brometalia erecti, Festucetalia valesiacae and Stipo‐Festucetalia pallentis, respectively. In the further subdivision of the orders, soil conditions, geographic distribution and altitude could be identified as factors driving the major floristic patterns. Conclusions We propose the following classification of the Festuco‐Brometea in our study area: (1) Brometalia erecti (semi‐dry grasslands) with Scabioso ochroleucae‐Poion angustifoliae (steppe meadows of the forest zone of E Europe) and Cirsio‐Brachypodion pinnati (meadow steppes on deep soils in the forest‐steppe zone of E Central and E Europe); (2) Festucetalia valesiacae (grass steppes) with Festucion valesiacae (grass steppes on less developed soils in the forest‐steppe zone of E Central and E Europe) and Stipion lessingianae (grass steppes in the steppe zone); (3) Stipo‐Festucetalia pallentis (rocky steppes) with Asplenio septentrionalis‐Festucion pallentis (rocky steppes on siliceous and intermediate soils), Bromo‐Festucion pallentis (thermophilous rocky steppes on calcareous soils), Diantho‐Seslerion (dealpine Sesleria caerulea grasslands of the Western Carpathians) and Seslerion rigidae (dealpine Sesleria rigida grasslands of the Romanian Carpathians).


Acta Botanica Croatica | 2012

Host range and host choice of Cuscuta species in Hungary

Kornél Baráth; János Csiky

Abstract - Extensive field studies were carried out in Hungary to get a picture of the host range and host choice of the Cuscuta species under natural conditions.We examined both parasitised and unparasitised plant species and found some aspects in which they are different. Compiling the host spectra of the various Cuscuta species based on herbaria, literature and our own observations, we can say that dodders infest at least 26% of the vascular flora of the country. In our study, the Hungarian Cuscuta species parasitised all plants that had a coverage of more than 25% in the sampling sites.We prepared a list of the most frequent host species for the parasites and revealed the importance of exclusive hosts. The results suggest that the habitat differences of the Cuscuta species can be responsible for the different host ranges. Furthermore, it was found that the reason why dodders parasitise plants from various life-forms in different proportions is not (only) the active host choice, but the characteristic features of the habitats.


Acta Botanica Croatica | 2013

Herbaceous periwinkle, Vinca herbacea Waldst. et Kit. 1799 (Apocynaceae), a new species of the Croatian flora

János Csiky; Dragica Purger

Abstract - Populations of herbaceous periwinkle, Vinca herbacea Waldst. et Kit., were found on April 2007 on Bansko Hill (Baranja, Croatia), which lies on the south-western edge of the range of this Pontic-Pannonian species. Since V. herbacea was included neither in the handbooks for plant identification nor in the current Croatian Flora Database, a new key for the determination of Vinca L. species of Croatia is presented herein. The herbaceous periwinkle should be treated as a critically endangered (CR) species in Croatia, considering the low number of individuals and the small extent of its occurrence in extremely rare habitats at the margin of its distribution. New recordings of some very rare or »data deficient « (DD) taxa of Croatia are also presented here: Scorzonera hispanica L. and Inula germanica L.


Acta Botanica Croatica | 2017

Bouché’s star of Bethlehem, Ornithogalum boucheanum (Kunth) Asch. (Hyacinthaceae), a new species in flora of Croatia

Dragica Purger; Sanja Kovačić; János Csiky

Abstract Populations of Bouché’s star of Bethlehem (Ornithogalum boucheanum (Kunth) Asch., fam. Hyacinthaceae) were recorded on Bansko Hill (Baranja, Croatia) in 2007. Since this species has not been previously confirmed in Croatia, it should be treated as a new taxon in the country and included in the Flora Croatica Database. In this paper we present a short morphological description of O. boucheanum and diagnostic morphological characters for differentiation from the related O. nutans L. We suggested O. boucheanum be evaluated as a critically endangered (CR) species of the Croatian flora, considering the small number of individuals and the small extension of its population. The recording of its populations on the edge of the loess cliff in Bansko Hill a part of which belongs to the Important Plant Area and Natura 2000, confirms the significance of this unique habitat in preserving rare and endangered plants.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2016

European Vegetation Archive (EVA): An integrated database of European vegetation plots

Milan Chytrý; S.M. Hennekens; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Ilona Knollová; Jürgen Dengler; Florian Jansen; Flavia Landucci; J.H.J. Schaminee; Svetlana Aćić; Emiliano Agrillo; Didem Ambarlı; Pierangela Angelini; Iva Apostolova; Fabio Attorre; Christian Berg; Erwin Bergmeier; Idoia Biurrun; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Henry Brisse; Juan Antonio Campos; Luis Carlón; Andraž Čarni; Laura Casella; János Csiky; Renata Ćušterevska; Zora Dajić Stevanović; Jiří Danihelka; Els De Bie; Patrice De Ruffray; Michele De Sanctis


Applied Vegetation Science | 2016

Vegetation classification and biogeography of European floodplain forests and alder carrs

Jan Douda; Karel Boublík; Michal Slezák; Idoia Biurrun; Josef Nociar; Alena Havrdová; Jana Doudová; Svetlana Aćić; Henry Brisse; Jörg Brunet; Milan Chytrý; Hugues Claessens; János Csiky; Yakiv Didukh; Panayotis Dimopoulos; Stefan Dullinger; Úna FitzPatrick; Antoine Guisan; Peter J. Horchler; Richard Hrivnák; Ute Jandt; Zygmunt Kacki; Balázs Kevey; Flavia Landucci; Hugues Lecomte; Jonathan Lenoir; Jaanus Paal; David Paternoster; Harald Pauli; Remigiusz Pielech


Annali di Botanica | 2007

HUNGARIAN PHYTOSOCIOLOGICAL DATABASE (COENODATRE F): SAMPLING METHODOLOGY, NOMENCLATURE AND ITS ACTUAL STAGE

K Lajer; Z. Botta-Duk; János Csiky; Ferenc Horváth


Applied Vegetation Science | 2017

Classification of European beech forests: a Gordian knot?

Wolfgang Willner; Borja Jiménez-Alfaro; Emiliano Agrillo; Idoia Biurrun; Juan Antonio Campos; Andraž Čarni; Laura Casella; János Csiky; Renata Ćušterevska; Yakiv Didukh; Jörg Ewald; Ute Jandt; Florian Jansen; Zygmunt Kącki; Ali Kavgaci; Jonathan Lenoir; Aleksander Marinšek; Viktor Onyshchenko; J. S. Rodwell; J.H.J. Schaminee; Jozef Šibík; Željko Škvorc; Jens-Christian Svenning; Ioannis Tsiripidis; Pavel Dan Turtureanu; Rossen Tzonev; Kiril Vassilev; Roberto Venanzoni; Thomas Wohlgemuth; Milan Chytrý

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Zoltán Botta-Dukát

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Emiliano Agrillo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Idoia Biurrun

University of the Basque Country

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Andraž Čarni

Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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Florian Jansen

University of Greifswald

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Henry Brisse

Aix-Marseille University

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S.M. Hennekens

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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