Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Marianna Biró is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marianna Biró.


Landscape Ecology | 2014

Multifunctionality of floodplain landscapes: relating management options to ecosystem services

Stefan Schindler; Zita Sebesvari; Christian Damm; Katrin Euller; Volker Mauerhofer; Anna Schneidergruber; Marianna Biró; Franz Essl; Robert Kanka; Sophie G. Lauwaars; Christiane Schulz-Zunkel; Theo van der Sluis; Michaela Kropik; Viktor Gasso; Andreas Krug; Martin T. Pusch; Klaus Peter Zulka; Werner Lazowski; Christa Hainz-Renetzeder; Klaus Henle; Thomas Wrbka

The concept of green infrastructure has been recently taken up by the European Commission for ensuring the provision of ecosystem services (ESS). It aims at the supply of multiple ESS in a given landscape, however, the effects of a full suite of management options on multiple ESS and landscape multifunctionality have rarely been assessed. In this paper we use European floodplain landscapes as example to develop an expert based qualitative conceptual model for the assessment of impacts of landscape scale interventions on multifunctionality. European floodplain landscapes are particularly useful for such approach as they originally provided a high variety and quantity of ESS that has declined due to the strong human impact these landscapes have experienced. We provide an overview of the effects of floodplain management options on landscape multifunctionality by assessing the effects of 38 floodplain management interventions on 21 relevant ESS, as well as on overall ESS supply. We found that restoration and rehabilitation consistently increased the multifunctionality of the landscape by enhancing supply of provisioning, regulation/maintenance, and cultural services. In contrast, conventional technical regulation measures and interventions related to extraction, infrastructure and intensive land use cause decrease in multifunctionality and negative effects for the supply of all three aspects of ESS. The overview of the effects of interventions shall provide guidance for decision makers at multiple governance levels. The presented conceptual model could be effectively applied for other landscapes that have potential for a supply of a high diversity of ESS.


Folia Geobotanica | 2007

A grid-based, satellite-image supported, multi-attributed vegetation mapping method (MÉTA)

Zsolt Molnár; Sándor Bartha; Tibor Seregélyes; Eszter Illyés; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Gábor Tímár; Ferenc Horváth; András Révész; András Kun; János Bölöni; Marianna Biró; László Bodonczi; Áron Deák József; Péter Fogarasi; András Horváth; István Isépy; László Karas; Ferenc Kecskés; Csaba Molnár; Adrienne Ortmannné Ajkai; Szilvia Rév

In this paper we present the main characteristics of a new, grid-based, landscape-ecology-oriented, satellite-image supported, field vegetation mapping method, called MÉTA (MÉTA stands for Magyarországi Élőhelyek Térképi Adatbázisa: GIS Database of the Hungarian Habitats). The goals of the MÉTA method based vegetation mapping program (MÉTA mapping) include the following: (1) to map the actual (semi-)natural vegetation of Hungary; (2) to evaluate Hungarian (semi-)natural vegetation heritage for conservation purposes; (3) to evaluate the present state of Hungarian landscapes from a vegetation point of view; (4) to collect vegetation and landscape ecological data for the prognosis of future changes of vegetation and the landscape. Spatial resolution, mapped attributes and mapping methods were developed to meet these goals.The MÉTA method uses a hexagon grid with cells of 35 hectares. In the hexagons, habitat types are listed, then the area, naturalness-based habitat quality, spatial pattern in the hexagon, effect of the neighbourhood, connectedness, and threats are recorded for each habitat type. Other attributes are recorded in the hexagons: potential natural vegetation, area occupied by invasive plant species, area of old fields, land use of grasslands, and landscape health status (naturalness and regeneration potential of the landscape in general). One hundred hexagons form a quadrat — mainly for practical, organizational reasons, but also for collecting certain vegetation data at this spatial scale. For standardization of mapping, three different pre-printed data sheets and two different kinds of guides have been composed (Mapping Guide and Habitat Guide) and field trainings were organized. For standardization of estimation of naturalness-based habitat quality and regeneration potential field examples were prepared for each habitat type and each category of these attributes.


Archive | 2012

Past Trends, Present State and Future Prospects of Hungarian Forest-Steppes

Zs. Molnár; Marianna Biró; Sándor Bartha; G. Fekete

In Hungary a countrywide vegetation mapping project carried out between 2003 and 2006 provided immense, detailed data on the current status of the forest-steppe vegetation (META database). In addition, two fundamentally important historical sources from the late eighteenth century have been analyzed recently. Using these sources we reconstruct and evaluate the past history and current status, and forecast the expected future of the vegetation types within the forest-steppe zone.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2015

An ethnobotanical perspective on traditional fermented plant foods and beverages in Eastern Europe

Renata Sõukand; Andrea Pieroni; Marianna Biró; Andrea Dénes; Yunus Dogan; Avni Hajdari; Raivo Kalle; Benedict Reade; Behxhet Mustafa; Anely Nedelcheva; Cassandra L. Quave; Łukasz Łuczaj

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Fermented food and beverages represent an important part of the worldwide foodscape, medicinal food domain and domestic strategies of health care, yet relevant traditional knowledge in Europe is poorly documented. METHODS Review of primary ethnographic literature, archival sources and a few ad-hoc ethnobotanical field studies in seven selected Eastern European countries (Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, Estonia, Hungary, Kosovo, and Poland) were conducted. RESULTS Current or recently abandoned uses of 116 botanical taxa, belonging to 37 families in fermented food or medicinal food products were recorded. These findings demonstrate a rich bio-cultural diversity of use, and also a clear prevalence of the use of fruits of the tannin- and phenolic-rich Rosaceae species in alcoholic, lactic- and acetic acid fermented preparations. In the considered countries, fermentation still plays (or has played until recent years) a crucial role in folk cuisines and this heritage requires urgent and in-depth evaluation. DISCUSSION Future studies should be aimed at further documenting and also bio-evaluating the ingredients and processes involved in the preparation of homemade fermented products, as this can be used to support local, community-based development efforts to foster food security, food sovereignty, and small-scale local food-based economies.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2016

Multifunctional floodplain management and biodiversity effects: a knowledge synthesis for six European countries

Stefan Schindler; Fionnuala H. O’Neill; Marianna Biró; Christian Damm; Viktor Gasso; Robert Kanka; Theo van der Sluis; Andreas Krug; Sophie G. Lauwaars; Zita Sebesvari; Martin T. Pusch; Boris Baranovsky; Thomas Ehlert; Bernd Neukirchen; James R. Martin; Katrin Euller; Volker Mauerhofer; Thomas Wrbka

Floodplain ecosystems are biodiversity hotspots and supply multiple ecosystem services. At the same time they are often prone to human pressures that increasingly impact their intactness. Multifunctional floodplain management can be defined as a management approach aimed at a balanced supply of multiple ecosystem services that serve the needs of the local residents, but also those of off-site populations that are directly or indirectly impacted by floodplain management and policies. Multifunctional floodplain management has been recently proposed as a key concept to reconcile biodiversity and ecosystem services with the various human pressures and their driving forces. In this paper we present biophysics and management history of floodplains and review recent multifunctional management approaches and evidence for their biodiversity effects for the six European countries Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Slovakia, Hungary and the Ukraine. Multifunctional use of floodplains is an increasingly important strategy in some countries, for instance in the Netherlands and Hungary, and management of floodplains goes hand in hand with sustainable economic activities resulting in flood safety and biodiversity conservation. As a result, biodiversity is increasing in some of the areas where multifunctional floodplain management approaches are implemented. We conclude that for efficient use of management resources and ecosystem services, consensual solutions need to be realized and biodiversity needs to be mainstreamed into management activities to maximize ecosystem service provision and potential human benefits. Multifunctionality is more successful where a broad range of stakeholders with diverse expertise and interests are involved in all stages of planning and implementation.


Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine | 2015

Landscape ethnoecological knowledge base and management of ecosystem services in a Székely-Hungarian pre-capitalistic village system (Transylvania, Romania).

Zsolt Molnár; Krisztina Gellény; Katalin Margóczi; Marianna Biró

BackgroundPrevious studies showed an in-depth ecological understanding by traditional people of managing natural resources. We studied the landscape ethnoecological knowledge (LEEK) of Székelys on the basis of 16-19th century village laws. We analyzed the habitat types, ecosystem services and sustainable management types on which village laws had focused.MethodsSzékelys had self-governed communities formed mostly of “noble peasants”. Land-use was dominated by commons and regulated by village laws framed by the whole community. Seventy-two archival laws from 52 villages, resulting in 898 regulations, were analyzed using the DPSIR framework. Explicit and implicit information about the contemporary ecological knowledge of Székelys was extracted. We distinguished between responses that limited use and supported regeneration and those that protected produced/available ecosystem services and ensured their fair distribution.ResultsMost regulations referred to forests (674), arable lands (562), meadows (448) and pastures (134). Székelys regulated the proportion of arable land, pasture and forest areas consciously in order to maximize long-term exploitation of ecosystem services. The inner territory was protected against overuse by relocating certain uses to the outer territory. Competition for ecosystem services was demonstrated by conflicts of pressure-related (mostly personal) and response-related (mostly communal) driving forces. Felling of trees (oaks), grazing of forests, meadows and fallows, masting, use of wild apple/pear trees and fishing were strictly regulated. Cutting of leaf-fodder, grazing of green crops, burning of forest litter and the polluting of streams were prohibited. Marketing by villagers and inviting outsiders to use the ecosystem services were strictly regulated, and mostly prohibited. Székelys recognized at least 71 folk habitat types, understood ecological regeneration and degradation processes, the history of their landscape and the management possibilities of ecosystem services. Some aspects of LEEK were so well known within Székely communities that they were not made explicit in village laws, others remained implicit because they were not related to regulations.ConclusionsBased on explicit and implicit information, we argue that Székelys possessed detailed knowledge of the local ecological system. Moreover the world’s first known explicit mention of ecosystem services (“Benefits that are provided by Nature for free”) originated from this region from 1786.


Archive | 2009

Floodplain hay meadows along the river Tisza in Hungary

Marianna Biró

For thousands of years, the character of the floodplain meadows along the river Tisza was determined by the meandering river. Though humankind settled on the edges of the floodplains of the river during the Neolithic, management of the landscape only began in the late Copper Age. The floodplain meadows and marshes along the river were utilized for floodplain management. The basis for water level control was allowing the floodwater to inundate the lower-lying marshes and meadows. This was achieved by making gaps in the sediment ridges running along the river. After the flood, the water was allowed to gradually drain away from the meadows. The drained meadows were grazed by herds of grey cattle, horses, sheep or pigs. Owing to the regular flooding of the river, habitats along the Tisza form an ecological corridor of outstanding importance, which is demonstrated by the downward dispersion of the fauna from the mountains.Keywords: floodplain hay meadows; river Tisza


Conservation Biology | 2018

Use of long-term data to evaluate loss and endangerment status of Natura 2000 habitats and effects of protected areas

Marianna Biró; János Bölöni; Zsolt Molnár

Habitat loss is a key driver of biodiversity loss. However, hardly any long-term time series analyses of habitat loss are available above the local scale for finer-level habitat categories. We analysed, from a long-term perspective, the habitat specificity of habitat-area loss, the change in trends in habitat loss since 1989 (dissolution of the communist state), and the impact of protected areas on habitat loss in Hungary. We studied 20 seminatural habitat types in 5000 randomly selected localities over 7 periods from 1783 to 2013 based on historical maps, archival and recent aerial photos and satellite imagery, botanical descriptions, and field data. We developed a method for estimating habitat types based on information transfer between historical sources (i.e., information from a source was used to interpret or enrich information from another source). Trends in habitat loss over time were habitat specific. We identified 7 types of habitat loss over time regarding functional form: linear, exponential, linear and exponential, delayed, minimum, maximum, and disappearance. Most habitats had continuous loss from period to period. After 1986 the average annual rates of habitat loss increased, but the trend reversed after 2002. Nature conservation measures significantly affected habitat loss; net loss was halted, albeit only inside protected areas. When calculating the degree of endangerment based on short-term data (52 years), we classified only 1 habitat as critically endangered, but based on long-term data (230 years), this increased to 7 (including habitat that no longer existed). Hungary will probably reach the global Convention on Biological Diversity Target 5 but will probably not achieve the EU Biodiversity Strategy target of halting habitat loss by 2020. Long-term trend data were highly useful when we examined recent habitat-loss data in a wider context. Our method could be applied effectively in other countries to augment shorter-term data sets on trends in habitat area.


Landscape Ecology | 2013

Drivers of grassland loss in Hungary during the post-socialist transformation (1987–1999)

Marianna Biró; Bálint Czúcz; Ferenc Horváth; András Révész; Bálint Csatári; Zsolt Molnár


Acta Botanica Hungarica | 2008

Distribution of the (semi-)natural habitats in Hungary I. Marshes and grasslands

Zs. Molnár; Marianna Biró; János Bölöni; Ferenc Horváth

Collaboration


Dive into the Marianna Biró's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zsolt Molnár

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ferenc Horváth

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zs. Molnár

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

János Bölöni

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Noémi Ujházy

Eötvös Loránd University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

András Révész

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ábel Molnár

Szent István University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Kanka

Slovak Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge