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The roadside vegetation in some counties of north England (north and west Yorkshire) was studied to determine the community structure according to the British National Vegetation Classification (NVC) and main environmental factors influencing its composition. The data from Phytosociological survey (699 quadrats) and from the physico-chemical analyses of 233 soil samples from 35 sites were obtained. Both the classification (TWINSPAN & MATCH) and ordination programs (Canonical Correspondence Analysis) were used. The roadside vegetation is mainly dominated by few grasses (Arrhenatherum elatius, Festuca rubra, Dactylis glomerata, Lolium perenne, Poa trivialis, Elymus repens, Holcus lanatus) and their associated herbs (Cirsium arvense, Heracleum sphondylium, Urtica dioica). Five NVC Mesotrophic grassland communities (Arrhenatheretum elatioris community MG1, Lolium perenne-Cynosurus cristatus grassland MG6, Lolium perenne leys MG7, Holcus lanatus- Deschampsia cespitosa grassland MG9, Festuca rubra-Agrostis stolonifera-Potentilla anserina grassland MG11) and one Upland Festuca ovina-Agrostis capillaris-Galium saxatile grassland, U4 were identified which in general, exhibited good fit with the typical NVC units. Altitude, pH, potassium, sodium and road age were found to be the main variables affecting the roadside vegetation. By relating the floristic composition with ecological characteristics of the roadside verges, three kinds of pattern of variation are observed. The first pattern is related to regional or geographical characteristics and the second pattern of variation exists across the width of the road verges showing a zonal pattern of plant distribution. The third scale of pattern is active at the local level including micro-environmental conditions, e.g., local edaphic variables.
Czasopismo
Rocznik
Tom
Strony
73--88
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 44 poz.,Rys., tab.,
Twórcy
autor
autor
autor
- Department of Environmental Science, University of Bradford, Bradford, BD7 1DP, UK Present Address: Department of Environmental Science, GC University, Faisalabad. Pakistan, kezm@brain.net.pk
Bibliografia
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- 3. Akbar K.F., Hale W.H.G., Headley A.D., Athar M. 2006a – Heavy metal contamination of roadside soils of northern England – Soil Water Res. 1: 158–163.
- 4. Akbar K.F., Hale W.H.G., Headley A.D., Athar M. 2006b – A comparative study of de-icing salts (sodium chloride & calcium magnesium acetate) on the growth of some roadside plants of England – J. Appl. Sci. Environ. Manage. 10: 67–71.
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- 7. Avery B.W. 1990 – Soils of the British Isles – Wallingford, Oxon.
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- 9. Cilleres S.S., Bredenkamp G.J. 2000 – Vegetation of road verges on an urbanization gradient in Potchefstroom, South Africa – Land. Urban Plan. 46: 217–139.
- 10. Dolan L.M.J., van Bohemen H., Whelan P., Akbar K.F., O’Malley, V., O’ Leary G., Keizer, P.J. 2006 – Towards the Sustainable Development of Modern Road Ecosystem. (In: The Ecology of Transportation: Managing mobility for the Environment. Eds: J. Davenport, J.L. Davenport – Springer, Netherlands pp. 275–331.
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- 12. Duffey E.M., Morris M.G., Sheil J., Ward L.K., Wells D.A., Wells T.C.E. 1974 – Grassland Ecology and Wildlife Management – Chapman and Hall, London.
- 13. Ellenberg H. 1988 – Vegetation Ecology of Central Europe – Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
- 14. Ferretti M., Cenni E., Bussotti F., Batistoni P. 1995 – Vehicle induced lead and cadmium contamination of roadside soils and plants in Italy – Ecol. Chem. 11: 213–228.
- 15. Frenkel R.E. 1970 – Ruderal Vegetation along Some Californian Roadsides – University of California Press, Berkley.
- 16. Greig-Smith P. 1948 – Biological Flora of the British Isles. Urtica dioica L – J. Ecol. 36: 343–351.
- 17. Grime J.P. 1979 – Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes – John Wiley, London.
- 18. Grime J.P., Hodgson, J.G., Hunt R. 1988 – Comparative Plant Ecology: A Functional Approach to Common British Species – Unwin Hyman, London.
- 19. Hafen M.R., Brinkmann R . 1996 – Analysis of lead in soils adjacent to an interstate highway in Tampa, Florida – Environ. Geochem. Health 18: 171–179.
- 20. Hansen K., Jansen J. 1972 – The Vegetation on Roadsides in Denmark – Dansk. Bot. Arkiv, 28: 1–59.
- 21. Harrison S., Hohn C.R., Ratay C. 2002 – Distribution of exotic plants along roads in a peninsular reserve – Biol. Invasions, 4: 425–430.
- 22. Hill M.O. 1979 – TWINSPAN – a FORTRAN program for arranging Multivariate Data in an Ordered Two Way Table by Classification of the individuals and the Attributes – Cornell University, Department of Ecology and Systematics, Ithaca, New York.
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- 24. Jantunen J., Saarinem K., Valtonen A., Saarnio S. 2006 – Grassland vegetation along some roads differing in size and traffic density – Ann. Bot. Fennici, 43: 107–117.
- 25. Kent M., Coker P. 1995 – Vegetation Description and Analysis. 2nd ed. – John Wiley & Sons. Chichester.
- 26. Lavin J.C., Wilmore G.T.D. (Eds) 1994 – The West Yorkshire Plant Atlas – City of Bradford Metropolitan Council, Bradford.
- 27. Melman P.J.M., Verkaar H.J., Heemsbergen H. 1988 – Species diversity of road verge vegetation and mowing regime in the Netherlands. Diversity and Pattern in Plant Communities. (Eds: H.J. During, M.J.A. Werger, H.J. Willems) – SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague, pp. 165–170.
- 28. Nabulo G., Oryem-Origa H., Diamond M. 2006 – Assessment of lead, cadmium, and zinc contamination of roadside soils, surface films, and vegetables in Kampala City, Uganda – Environ. Res. 101: 42–52.
- 29. Pfitzenmeyer C.D.C. 1962 – Biological flora of the British Isles: Arrhenatherum elatius (L.) – J. & Presl – J. Ecol. 50: 235–245.
- 30. Rayner D.H., Hemingway J.E. 1974 – The Geology and Mineral resources of Yorkshire – Yorkshire Geological Society, Leeds.
- 31. Rodwell J.S. 1991 – The National Vegetation Classification – British Wildlife, 2: 266–268.
- 32. Rodwell J.S. (Ed.) 1992 – British Plant Communities, 3. Grasslands and Montane Communities – Cambridge University Press. Cambridge
- 33. Rodwell J.S. 1994 – The Vegetation of West Yorkshire. The West Yorkshire Plant Atlas. (Eds: J.C. Lavin, G.T.D Wilmore) – City of Bradford Metropolitan Council, Bradford. pp, 8–18.
- 34. Rowell D.L. 1994 – Soil Science: Methods and Applications – Longman Scientific and Technical, Harlow.
- 35. Sargent C. 1984 – Britain’s Railway Vegetation – I.T.E. NERC. Huntingdon.
- 36. Scott N.E., Davison A.W. 1982 – De-icing salt and the invasion of road verges by maritime plants – Watsonia, 14: 41–52.
- 37. Smith L.P. 1984 – The Agricultural Climate of England and Wales – HMSO London.
- 38. Stace C. 1991 – New Flora of the British Isles – Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
- 39. ter Braak C.J.F. 1988 – CANOCO – a FORTRAN program for Canonical Community Ordination by [Partial] [Detrended] [Canonical] [Correspondence] [Analysis] (Version 2.0) – TNO Institute of Applied Computer Science. Wageningen.
- 40. Thomas H.S.C. 1992 – Colonisation and succession along a South Wales trunk road: variation and change in relation to natural and human factors – Ph.D. Thesis. Univ. of Wales, Cardiff.
- 41. Ullmann I., Heindl B. 1989 – Geographical and ecological differentiation of roadside vegetation in temperate Europe – Acta Bot. 102: 261–269.
- 42. Way J.M. 1977 – Roadside verges and conservation in Britain: a review – Conserv. Biol. 12: 65–74.
- 43. Wróbel M., Tomaszewicz T., Chudecka J. 2006 – Floristic diversity and spatial distribution of roadside halophytes along forest and field roads in Szczecin lowland (West Poland) – Pol. J. Ecol. 54: 303–309
- 44. Wheeler B.D., Shaw S.C., Cook R.E.D. 1992 – Phytometric assessment of the fertility of undrained rich-fen soils – J. Appl. Ecol. 29: 466–475.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BGPK-2379-9065