Abstract

Aim: The aim of this study is to analyze the mesophilous forests of Albania including Fagus sylvatica and submontane Corylus avellana forests. Mesophilous Albanian forests are poorly known and were not included in the recent syntaxonomic revisions at the European scale. Study area: Albania. Methods: We used a dataset of 284 published and unpublished relevés. They were classified using the Ward’s minimum variance. NMDS ordination was conducted, with over-laying of climatic and geological variables, to analyze the ecological gradients along which these forests develop and segregate. Random Forest was used to define the potential distribution of the identified forest groups in Albania. Results: The study identified seven groups of forests in Albania: Corylus avellana forests, Ostrya carpinifolia-Fagus sylvatica forests, lower montane mesophytic Fagus sylvatica forests, middle montane mesophytic Fagus sylvatica forests, middle montane basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forests, upper montane basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forests, upper montane acidophytic Fagus sylvatica forests. These can be grouped into four main types: Corylus avellana and Ostrya carpinifolia-Fagus sylvatica forests, thermo-basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forest, meso-basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forest and acidophytic Fagus sylvatica forests. This scheme corresponds to the ecological classification recently proposed in a European revision for Fagus sylvatica forests Conclusion: Our study supports an ecological classification of mesophilous forests of Albania at the level of suballiance. Analysis is still preliminary at the level of association, but it shows a high diversity of forest types. Taxonomic reference: Euro+Med PlantBase (http://ww2.bgbm.org/EuroPlusMed/) [accessed 25 Novemeber 2019]. Syntaxonomic references: Mucina et al. (2016) for alliances, orders and classes; Willner et al. (2017) for suballiances.

Highlights

  • Fagus sylvatica forests are among the most studied vegetation types in Europe (Braun-Blanquet 1932; Moor 1938; Soó 1964; Dierschke 2004)

  • The second cluster was further split into a sub-cluster including the groups B and C, characterized by thermo-basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forests, and a second sub-cluster with groups D, E and F including the mesophytic Fagus sylvatica forests

  • Mesophytic Fagus sylvatica forests are divided into meso-basiphytic (D, E) and acidophytic (F) Fagus sylvatica forests

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Summary

Introduction

Fagus sylvatica forests are among the most studied vegetation types in Europe (Braun-Blanquet 1932; Moor 1938; Soó 1964; Dierschke 2004). A recent broad-scale revision of Fagus sylvatica forests (Willner et al 2017) supported a multidimensional classification that recognizes the traditional geographical alliances, and classifies most of the variability of Fagus sylvatica forests at the level of suballiance This classification groups Fagus sylvatica forests into three main informal groups: acidophytic, meso-basiphytic and thermo-basiphytic Fagus sylvatica forests, which in turn are divided into a number of geographical and floristically well-defined suballiances. This classification cuts across the geographical range of Fagus sylvatica, but the authors proposed an alternative classification into six geographically defined alliances, e.g. Aremonio-Fagion, Geranio striati-Fagion and Fagion moesiacae. In Albania, very few vegetation relevés have been published (Mersinllari 1989; Kalajnxhiu et al 2012; Mahmutaj 2015) and this country is a blank in the maps of Willner et al (2017)

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