Kamila Reczyńska
University of Wrocław
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Featured researches published by Kamila Reczyńska.
BioScience | 2017
Kris Verheyen; Pieter De Frenne; Lander Baeten; Donald M. Waller; Radim Hédl; Michael P. Perring; Haben Blondeel; Jörg Brunet; Markéta Chudomelová; Guillaume Decocq; Emiel De Lombaerde; Leen Depauw; Thomas Dirnböck; Tomasz Durak; Ove Eriksson; Frank S. Gilliam; Thilo Heinken; Steffi Heinrichs; Martin Hermy; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; Michael A Jenkins; Sarah E Johnson; Keith Kirby; Martin Kopecký; Dries Landuyt; Jonathan Lenoir; Daijiang Li; Martin Macek; Sybryn L. Maes; František Máliš
More and more ecologists have started to resurvey communities sampled in earlier decades to determine long-term shifts in community composition and infer the likely drivers of the ecological changes observed. However, to assess the relative importance of and interactions among multiple drivers, joint analyses of resurvey data from many regions spanning large environmental gradients are needed. In this article, we illustrate how combining resurvey data from multiple regions can increase the likelihood of driver orthogonality within the design and show that repeatedly surveying across multiple regions provides higher representativeness and comprehensiveness, allowing us to answer more completely a broader range of questions. We provide general guidelines to aid the implementation of multiregion resurvey databases. In so doing, we aim to encourage resurvey database development across other community types and biomes to advance global environmental change research.
Applied Vegetation Science | 2017
Kamila Reczyńska; Krzysztof Świerkosz
Questions Have compositional changes occurred in thermophilous oak forests in Poland during the past two decades? What kinds of drivers might be responsible for these changes? Are the thermophilous oak woods still rich in species or have they rather lost their diversity? Location Sudetes Mts., SW Poland. Methods The vegetation of thermophilous oak forests within four distinct areas was surveyed on 92 semi-permanent plots in the time periods from 1992 to 1994 and from 2010 to 2014. The overall pattern in vegetation changes, trends in species composition and site parameters, as well as the diversity of studied communities were analysed using ordination and permutation techniques. Results The species composition of thermophilous oak forests has changed significantly. We recorded a decrease in the share of oligotrophic light-demanding species, whereas mesotrophic light-demanding and nitrophilous species showed an upward trend. Regarding the fourth group of shade-tolerant species, their share varied depending on the site. The analysis of habitat parameters revealed that the studied oak forest communities generally shifted from communities of moderately oligotrophic and mesic character towards forests growing on nutrient-richer but drier habitats. Interestingly, the observed change in species composition was not accompanied by the loss of biodiversity that has generally been reported in other types of thermophilous forests in Europe. Conclusions Changes observed within thermophilous and previously coppiced oak forests of southwest Poland are going in a direction which has not been recognized so far in analogous communities. The transition of studied communities is probably a result of the cumulative influence of several drivers, the most crucial of which seem to be soil regeneration, after the period of intensive acidity caused by sulphur emission between 1960 and 2000, and decreasing moisture. The observed changes are independent of the type of forest management (or the lack thereof) within the study sites.
Central European Journal of Biology | 2014
Krzysztof Świerkosz; Kamila Reczyńska; Karel Boublík
Using vegetation databases from Poland, the Czech Republic, Austria, Slovakia and our own material collected during a field work, we have analysed the variability of species composition of Abies alba-dominated communities in Central Europe. Analysis was performed using a modified TWINSPAN algorithm in the JUICE software. Ecological analysis was performed on the basis of mean Ellenberg indicator values with a MoPeT_v1.0.r script prepared in R software. In general, the findings indicated that there are at least 8 types of Central European silver fir-dominated forests with different patterns in species composition and habitat conditions. These are the oligotrophic subcontinental silver fir forests of the Polish highlands, oligotrophic (sub)montane silver fir forest, hygrophilous silver fir forests, oligo-mesotrophic (sub)montane silver fir forests, mesotrophic (sub)montane silver fir forests, submontane and montane calcicolous silver fir forests of the Alps and the Carpathians, eutrophic silver fir-beech forests and silver fir ravine forests. The main conclusion is that the diversity of species composition of Abies alba-dominated forests in Central Europe is lower than described in current regional synthesis, which was confirmed by ecological analyses.
Landscape Research | 2018
Agnieszka Latocha; Kamila Reczyńska; Tomasz Gradowski; Krzysztof Świerkosz
ABSTRACT Using the concept of landscape memory we examined the relationship between persistence of anthropogenic landforms and their botanical composition several decades after depopulation of Karpno village (Sudetes Mts), which represents the socio-economic and ecological processes typical for mountainous areas in post-war Central Europe. The research was based on geomorphic and botanical field surveys. Evidence of anthropogenic landscape memory still persists in local land morphology and ecosystem composition, despite the apparent homogeneity of large-scale landscape features. Former human activities continue to affect local site properties, which results in a mosaic of diverse habitats. Plant species composition of secondary ecosystems remains different from both their anthropogenic precursors and surrounding natural communities. Persistent habitat eutrophication slows down competitive exclusion of shade intolerant species in sites overgrown by forest canopy. Observed evidence cannot be explained without knowledge of local history, which is vital for planning development and conservation of bio-cultural landscapes.
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2018
Kris Verheyen; Martin Bažány; Ewa Chećko; Markéta Chudomelová; Déborah Closset-Kopp; Patryk Czortek; Guillaume Decocq; Pieter De Frenne; Luc De Keersmaeker; Cecilia Enríquez García; Martina Fabšičová; John-Arvid Grytnes; Lucia Hederová; Radim Hédl; Thilo Heinken; Fride Høistad Schei; Soma Horváth; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; Edyta Jermakowicz; Tereza Klinerová; Jens Kolk; Martin Kopecký; Iwona Kuras; Jonathan Lenoir; Martin Macek; František Máliš; Tone Martinessen; Tobias Naaf; László F. Papp; Ágnes Papp-Szakály
Aim: Revisits of non-permanent, relocatable plots first surveyed several decades ago offer a direct way to observe vegetation change and form a unique and increasingly used source of information for global change research. Despite the important insights that can be obtained from resurveying these quasi-permanent vegetation plots, their use is prone to both observer and relocation errors. Studying the combined effects of both error types is important since they will play out together in practice and it is yet unknown to what extent observed vegetation changes are influenced by these errors. Methods: We designed a study that mimicked all steps in a resurvey study and that allowed determination of the magnitude of observer errors only vs the joint observer and relocation errors. Communities of vascular plants growing in the understorey of temperate forests were selected as study system. Ten regions in Europe were covered to explore generality across contexts and 50 observers were involved, which deliberately differed in their experience in making vegetation records. Results: The mean geographic distance between plots in the observer+relocation error data set was 24m. The mean relative difference in species richness in the observer error and the observer+relocation data set was 15% and 21%, respectively. The mean pseudo-turnover between the five records at a quasi-permanent plot location was on average 0.21 and 0.35 for the observer error and observer+relocation error data sets, respectively. More detailed analyses of the compositional variation showed that the nestedness and turnover components were of equal importance in the observer data set, whereas turnover was much more important than nestedness in the observer+relocation data set. Interestingly, the differences between the observer and the observer+relocation data sets largely disappeared when looking at temporal change: both the changes in species richness and species composition over time were very similar in these data sets. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that observer and relocation errors are non-negligible when resurveying quasi-permanent plots. A careful interpretation of the results of resurvey studies is warranted, especially when changes are assessed based on a low number of plots. We conclude by listing measures that should be taken to maximally increase the precision and the strength of the inferences drawn from vegetation resurveys.
Polish Journal of Environmental Studies | 2017
Krzysztof Swierkosz; Kamila Reczyńska; Iwona Kuras
Our paper presents a comparison of historical data concerning the distribution of forest communities in the Sowie Mountains in southwestern Poland in 1968-71 with material collected by the authors between 2009 and 2013. The analyses were performed using geographic information system software. The archival vegetation maps were digitized, and the layer of the current distribution of forest communities was applied afterward. Archival data indicated that, in the study area, spruce monocultures of anthropogenic character predominated, occupying 90% of forest area. The obtained results suggest that regular forest management conducted within the study area has surprisingly contributed to an increase in the area of forest communities of the Querco-Fagetea class from 766 to 1,579 ha (more than 100%) over the last 45 years. The largest rise in the area of studied communities was observed on meso-oligotrophic habitats, and was reflected in the increase of the area of acidophilous beech forests, representing Luzulo luzuloidis-Fagetum association (habitat 9110 protected in the European Union), from 168 ha to1,064 ha. There was a minor decrease in the area of submontane riparian forests Carici remotae-Fraxinetum (habitat 91E0); the area of mesotrophic beech forests Galio odorati-Fagetum (habitat 9130) seems to be stable. Approximately 72% of deciduous forests in the study area have retained their spatial cover for 45 years. The newly created forest communities are deprived of a number of essential elements of the structure, primarily dead wood, including lying trunks and trees. The lack of these features does not allow us to assess the status of these ecosystems as entirely satisfactory. However, the possibility of converting Picea abies monocultures in deciduous forests of the Querco-Fagetea class under regular forest management should be considered beneficial to the conservation status of forest ecosystems of mountain areas of Central Europe.
Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae | 2015
Kamila Reczyńska; Krzysztof Świerkosz; Zygmunt Dajdok
Global Change Biology | 2018
Michael P. Perring; Markus Bernhardt-Römermann; Lander Baeten; Gabriele Midolo; Haben Blondeel; Leen Depauw; Dries Landuyt; Sybryn L. Maes; Emiel De Lombaerde; María M. Carón; Mark Vellend; Jörg Brunet; Markéta Chudomelová; Guillaume Decocq; Martin Diekmann; Thomas Dirnböck; Inken Dörfler; Tomasz Durak; Pieter De Frenne; Frank S. Gilliam; Radim Hédl; Thilo Heinken; P.W.F.M. Hommel; Bogdan Jaroszewicz; K. J. Kirby; Martin Kopecký; Jonathan Lenoir; Daijiang Li; František Máliš; Fraser J.G. Mitchell
Phytocoenologia | 2015
Kamila Reczyńska
Phytocoenologia | 2014
Krzysztof Świerkosz; Kamila Reczyńska; Paweł Pech