Classification of the Sardinian pine woodlands

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Authors

CALVIA Giacomo BONARI Gianmaria ANGIOLINI Claudia FARRIS Emmanuele FENU Giuseppe BACCHETTA Gianluigi

Year of publication 2022
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source MEDITERRANEAN BOTANY
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://doi.org/10.5209/mbot.72699
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/mbot.72699
Keywords Mediterranean Basin; phytosociology; Pinetea halepensis; Pinus halepensis; Pinus pinaster; Pinus pinea; Sardinia; syntaxonomy; vegetation
Description Mediterranean pine woodlands are one of the most common wooded vegetation types across the Mediterranean Basin and are included in two habitats of European interest as they have great conservation importance. We studied the woodlands of the class Pinetea halepensis dominated by Pinus halepensis, P. pinaster, and P. pinea in Sardinia (Italy) with the aim to clarify their syntaxonomic position. We compiled a dataset of 66 original vegetation releves, complemented with the holotypes of similar vegetation types formerly described for Italy and Corsica (France). We classified P. halepensis woodlands, native to the Island of San Pietro, to the association Erico arboreae-Pinetum halepensis. We classified P. halepensis woodlands growing on limestones of the south-western coast of Sardinia to the new association Smilaco asperae-Pinetum halepensis and woodlands typical of coastal dunes to the new association Asparago horridi-Pinetum halepensis. We also described the north-eastern Sardinia P. pinaster woodlands as the new association Arbuto unedonis-Pinetum pinastri, of which we recognised two new subassociations, typicum and cephalantheretosum longifoliae, ecologically distinguished by the xerophilous and mesophilous conditions, respectively. Furthermore, we classified P. pinea woodlands, putatively native only to stabilised sand dunes of south-western Sardinia, in the new association Querco calliprini-Pinetum pineae. This study represents the first complete survey and classification of Sardinian pine woodlands, allowing a better understanding of their ecology, floristic composition and differences with other Mediterranean pine woodlands.
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