Abstract
Biogeographic delineations within the European temperate mountains remain poorly understood, as there has been little effort to assemble and analyze vegetation relevés covering Pyrenees, Alps, Carpathians and Balkans altogether. Our study tackles this issue by focusing on the widely distributed alpine acidic grasslands dominated by Carex curvula. Cluster analysis of more than 800 vegetation relevés revealed the European-scale spatial patterns of vascular plant diversity in these alpine grasslands. The geographical distribution of floristic clusters was partly congruent with the physiography of European mountains. Southern European ranges (Southern Balkans and Pyrenees) exhibit a high level of endemism and corresponding floristic clusters are well separated from the others. Marked floristic similarities between the Easternmost Alps, the Carpathians, and the Northern Balkans (Stara Planina) supported a major floristic boundary that runs through the Austrian Alps and that is likely the legacy of a shared Quaternary history. Within the Alps, floristic clustering was mainly driven by ecological drivers and not geography. This paper presents the first detailed study of spatial patterns of species distribution within the European Alpine System, based on a comprehensive analysis of within- and between-community species diversity. It shows that the quantitative analysis of large and consistent data sets may question the traditional delineations of biogeographic regions within European mountains.
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