Pinelopi Delipetrou
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pinelopi Delipetrou.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Marten Winter; Oliver Schweiger; Stefan Klotz; Wolfgang Nentwig; Pavlos Andriopoulos; Margarita Arianoutsou; Corina Basnou; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Viktoras Didžiulis; Martin Hejda; Philip E. Hulme; Philip W. Lambdon; Jan Pergl; Petr Pyšek; David B. Roy; Ingolf Kühn
Human activities have altered the composition of biotas through two fundamental processes: native extinctions and alien introductions. Both processes affect the taxonomic (i.e., species identity) and phylogenetic (i.e., species evolutionary history) structure of species assemblages. However, it is not known what the relative magnitude of these effects is at large spatial scales. Here we analyze the large-scale effects of plant extinctions and introductions on taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity of floras across Europe, using data from 23 regions. Considering both native losses and alien additions in concert reveals that plant invasions since AD 1500 exceeded extinctions, resulting in (i) increased taxonomic diversity (i.e., species richness) but decreased phylogenetic diversity within European regions, and (ii) increased taxonomic and phylogenetic similarity among European regions. Those extinct species were phylogenetically and taxonomically unique and typical of individual regions, and extinctions usually were not continent-wide and therefore led to differentiation. By contrast, because introduced alien species tended to be closely related to native species, the floristic differentiation due to species extinction was lessened by taxonomic and phylogenetic homogenization effects. This was especially due to species that are alien to a region but native to other parts of Europe. As a result, floras of many European regions have partly lost and will continue to lose their uniqueness. The results suggest that biodiversity needs to be assessed in terms of both species taxonomic and phylogenetic identity, but the latter is rarely used as a metric of the biodiversity dynamics.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Margarita Arianoutsou; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Montserrat Vilà; Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; Laura Celesti-Grapow; Grant Wardell-Johnson; Lesley Henderson; Nicol Fuentes; Eduardo Ugarte-Mendes; Philip W. Rundel
The objective of this work was to compare and contrast the patterns of alien plant invasions in the world’s five mediterranean-climate regions (MCRs). We expected landscape age and disturbance history to have bearing on levels of invasion. We assembled a database on naturalized alien plant taxa occurring in natural and semi-natural terrestrial habitats of all five regions (specifically Spain, Italy, Greece and Cyprus from the Mediterranean Basin, California, central Chile, the Cape Region of South Africa and Southwestern - SW Australia). We used multivariate (hierarchical clustering and NMDS ordination) trait and habitat analysis to compare characteristics of regions, taxa and habitats across the mediterranean biome. Our database included 1627 naturalized species with an overall low taxonomic similarity among the five MCRs. Herbaceous perennials were the most frequent taxa, with SW Australia exhibiting both the highest numbers of naturalized species and the highest taxonomic similarity (homogenization) among habitats, and the Mediterranean Basin the lowest. Low stress and highly disturbed habitats had the highest frequency of invasion and homogenization in all regions, and high natural stress habitats the lowest, while taxonomic similarity was higher among different habitats in each region than among regions. Our analysis is the first to describe patterns of species characteristics and habitat vulnerability for a single biome. We have shown that a broad niche (i.e. more than one habitat) is typical of naturalized plant species, regardless of their geographical area of origin, leading to potential for high homogenization within each region. Habitats of the Mediterranean Basin are apparently the most resistant to plant invasion, possibly because their landscapes are generally of relatively recent origin, but with a more gradual exposure to human intervention over a longer period.
In Post-Fire Management and Restoration of Southern European Forests, Vol. 24 (2012), pp. 257-291, doi:10.1007/978-94-007-2208-8_11 | 2012
Margarita Arianoutsou; Vittorio Leone; D. Moya; Raffaella Lovreglio; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Jorge de las Heras
The current chapter starts by describing the elements of biodiversity in the Mediterranean Basin hotspot. It then describes climate change and fire regime interactions. Geographically restricted forest types with high conservation value such as Abies cephalonica, A. pinsapo, Juniperus macrocarpa, Quercus trojana, Tetraclinis articulata and Pinus leucodermis forests are presented as case studies. These forest hotspots are threatened by changing fire regime either because they lack of any active post-fire regeneration mechanism or because they are exposed to more frequent fires than they used to. Current post-fire management, if any, is presented and commented.
Science of The Total Environment | 2017
Panayiotis G. Dimitrakopoulos; Sotirios Koukoulas; Alexandros Galanidis; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Dimitris Gounaridis; Korina Touloumi; Margarita Arianoutsou
This paper aims to determine the main factors that shape the spatial patterns of alien plant species occurrence across Natura 2000 Special Areas of Conservation (SACs) in Greece, and quantify their influence. A series of spatial analysis techniques for the development of a spatial database of the factors involved, followed by a boosted negative binomial Generalised Additive Model for location scale and shape, were implemented. Native plant species richness, topography and hydrography, human population density, and a spatial preference to the northern-western sites are the key factors that explain the variation in the occurrence of alien plant species. Native plant species richness and human population density have a positive effect on alien plant species presence, while topography aspects, such as elevation and slope, and the distance from the hydrographical network a negative one. All factors are indirectly linked to propagule pressure emphasizing the importance of human activities for the efforts on managing protected areas.
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society | 2010
K. Georghiou; Pinelopi Delipetrou
Annals of Botany | 1994
Costas A. Thanos; K. Georghiou; Pinelopi Delipetrou
Journal of Biogeography | 2010
Margarita Arianoutsou; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Laura Celesti-Grapow; Corina Basnou; Ioannis Bazos; Yannis Kokkoris; C. Blasi; Montserrat Vilà
Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2011
M. Andreou; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Costas Kadis; G. Tsiamis; K. Bourtzis; K. Georghiou
Sibbaldia: the Journal of Botanic Garden Horticulture | 2012
Sophia Rhizopoulou; Alexander Lykos; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Irene Vallianatou
Proceedings of the 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology | 2018
Margarita Arianoutsou; Pinelopi Delipetrou; Laura Celesti-Grapow; Corina Basnou; Ioannis Bazos; Yannis Kokkoris; C. Blasi; Monsterrat Vilá