Kateřina Šumberová
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Kateřina Šumberová.
Folia Geobotanica | 2014
Dana Michalcová; Milan Chytrý; Vilém Pechanec; Ondřej Hájek; Jan W. Jongepier; Jiří Danihelka; Vít Grulich; Kateřina Šumberová; Zdenka Preislerová; Anne Ghisla; Giovanni Bacaro; David Zelený
Some regions and habitats harbour high numbers of plant species at a fine scale. A remarkable example is the grasslands of the White Carpathian Mountains (Czech Republic), which holds world records in local species richness; however, the causes are still poorly understood. To explore the landscape context of this phenomenon and its relationships to diversity patterns at larger scales, we compared diversity patterns in grasslands and other vegetation types in the White Carpathians with those in nearby regions lacking extremely species-rich grasslands, using data from vegetation plots and flora grid mapping of entire landscapes. Although small-scale species richness of grasslands and ruderal/weed vegetation of the White Carpathians was higher than in the nearby regions, the number of grassland and ruderal/weed species in the regional flora of the White Carpathians was not. Diversity of forests was not higher in this region at any scale. Thus the remarkably high local species richness of the White Carpathian grasslands does not result from a larger grassland species pool in the region, but from the fine-scale co-occurrence of many grassland species in this landscape, which results in the formation of grassland communities that are locally rich but with similar species composition when comparing different sites (i.e. high alpha but low beta diversity). This pattern can be partly attributed to the large total area of these grasslands, which reduces random extinctions of rare species, low geological diversity, which enables many species to occur at many sites across the landscape, and high land-cover diversity, which supports mixing of species from different vegetation types.
Archive | 2016
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.
Hydrobiologia | 2012
Kateřina Šumberová; Michal Ducháček; Zdeňka Lososová
Tillaea aquatica (Crassulaceae) is considered as annual wetland species threatened by changes in land use and progressing eutrophication in large part of its European distribution range. We summarised the historical and recent data on this species, and analysed its distribution and associated habitat changes in the Czech Republic. We used permanent plots as well as seed bank and seed dispersal studies to obtain better insight into the plant’s survival strategy. During the second half of the twentieth century T. aquatica disappeared from most historical localities situated mainly in large fishponds. After 1999, altogether 18 new populations were found in small fry ponds and other fish-farming ponds. The largest populations of Tillaea were found in ponds with long-term bottom exposure where the vegetation of perennial herbs was eliminated by herbicides or grazing. Propagules easily dispersible by water, on gumboots or tyres of vehicles, and long-term soil seed bank also might contribute to persistence of the species in the habitats, diminishing the chance of extinction. As the fishpond management has changed, and so have done the original habitats of Tillaea, the species could survive in habitats different from those in the past. In this article, we suggest management measures aimed at promoting survival of Tillaea under new circumstances.
Forensic Science International | 2017
Kateřina Šumberová; Michal Ducháček
Plant seeds exhibit many species-specific traits, thus potentially being especially helpful for forensic investigations. Seeds of a broad range of plant species occur in soil seed banks of various habitats and may become attached in large quantities to moving objects. Although plant seeds are now routinely used as trace evidence in forensic practice, only scant information has been published on this topic in the scientific literature. Thus, the standard methods remain unknown to specialists in such botanical subjects as plant ecology and plant geography. These specialists, if made aware of the forensic uses of seeds, could help in development of new, more sophisticated approaches. We aim to bridge the gap between forensic analysts and botanists. Therefore, we explore the available literature and compare it with our own experiences to reveal both the potential and limits of soil seed bank and seed dispersal analysis in forensic investigations. We demonstrate that habitat-specific and thus relatively rare species are of the greatest forensic value. Overall species composition, in terms of species presence/absence and relative abundance can also provide important information. In particular, the ecological profiles of seeds found on any moving object can help us identify the types of environments through which the object had travelled. We discuss the applicability of this approach to various European environments, with the ability to compare seed samples with georeferenced vegetation databases being particularly promising for forensic investigations. We also explore the forensic limitations of soil seed bank and seed dispersal vector analyses.
Biologia | 2016
Richard Hrivnák; Judita Kochjarová; Kateřina Šumberová; András Schmotzer
Abstract Lindernia dubia (L.) Pennell, a Northern-American species, was recently found in two localities in central Slovakia (near Trenč and Štiavnické Bane villages) as a new species for the flora of Slovakia. Individuals of the species grew in wetland vegetation of the class Isoëto-Nano-Juncetea in both cases. The second mentioned locality probably belongs to the altitudinal maxima of L. dubia in Europe. Although the origin of L. dubia in the Slovak localities remains unknown, we suppose that zoochory or anthropochory are the most probable modes of its introduction into the territory of Slovakia.
Applied Vegetation Science | 2016
Ladislav Mucina; Helga Bültmann; Klaus Dierssen; Jean-Paul Theurillat; Thomas Raus; Andraž Čarni; Kateřina Šumberová; Wolfgang Willner; Jürgen Dengler; Rosario Garcı́a; Milan Chytrý; Michal Hájek; Romeo Di Pietro; Dmytro Iakushenko; Jens Pallas; F. J. A. Daniels; Erwin Bergmeier; Arnoldo Santos Guerra; Nikolai Ermakov; Milan Valachovič; J.H.J. Schaminée; Tatiana Lysenko; Yakiv Didukh; Sandro Pignatti; J. S. Rodwell; Jorge Capelo; Heinrich E. Weber; Ayzik Solomeshch; Panayotis Dimopoulos; Carlos Aguiar
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2015
Flavia Landucci; Lubomír Tichý; Kateřina Šumberová; Milan Chytrý
Phytocoenologia | 2013
Kateřina Šumberová; Richard Hrivnák
Phytologia Balcanica | 2004
Kateřina Šumberová; Rossen Tzonev; Vladimir Vladimirov
Archive | 2000
Jiří Vicherek; Vladimír Antonín; Jiří Danihelka; Vít Grulich; Bronislav Gruna; Zbyněk Hradílek; Vladimír Řehořek; Kateřina Šumberová; Petr Vampola; Alois Vágner