2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11258-012-0090-9
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Trait-related flowering patterns in submediterranean mountain meadows

Abstract: The research aims were to identify the flowering pattern and the related functional strategies in submediterranean mountain meadows (central Italy) and understand their relationships with some environmental and community structure variables. The number of flowering shoots per species was counted and environmental data were collected in 40 plots during 2009. Analysis of the species and trait data sets highlighted a flowering pattern and an underlying functional pattern. Dominant species tend to bloom in the cen… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…The trends refer to the growing season 2009, before hay cutting and the water scarcity period. Data are partly drawn from Catorci et al (2011aCatorci et al ( , 2012b) (black and white symbols indicate mown and abandoned meadows, respectively; triangles, circles, squares and the grey line indicate soil temperature, soil moisture, aboveground phytomass and mean daily air temperature, respectively).…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The trends refer to the growing season 2009, before hay cutting and the water scarcity period. Data are partly drawn from Catorci et al (2011aCatorci et al ( , 2012b) (black and white symbols indicate mown and abandoned meadows, respectively; triangles, circles, squares and the grey line indicate soil temperature, soil moisture, aboveground phytomass and mean daily air temperature, respectively).…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In each plot, we counted the number of flowering shoots per species at each time (we considered shoots with more than 70% of flowers in full blooming). On the basis of previous studies (Catorci et al 2012a(Catorci et al , 2012b, we assumed that the time interval between two consecutive observations was wide enough to record the flowering time for all the species and to avoid to count flowering shoots twice during the subsequent times of sampling.…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the other hand, mowing allows the establishment of plants with leaves concentrated at the ground level (prostrate, rosulate), or just above it (hemirosulate), and of geophytes and therophytes, which benefit from canopy removal, thus avoiding competitive exclusion due to light depletion (Catorci et al, 2011b). Moreover, the vegetative reproduction types fostered by mowing (root, tuber and bulb splitters) allow a fast canopy pre-emption and the coexistence with competitive grasses by spatial and temporal niche differentiation in highly productive grassland communities (Catorci et al, 2012a). The observed small difference in nitrogen soil content does not seem to have significant implications from a floristic point of view.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%