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Biodiversity Conservation: Geosynphytosociology as a Tool of Analysis and Modelling of Grassland Systems Cover

Biodiversity Conservation: Geosynphytosociology as a Tool of Analysis and Modelling of Grassland Systems

Open Access
|Jan 2010

Abstract

The study site is located along the Umbria-Marches Apennine (central Italy). Following a series of research topics, the aims and objectives of this paper are to present the tested process of forage resources modelling at a large scale in a pastoral system in order to define essential management and decision making aimed on biodiversity conservation.

The analytical process is based on correlation between phytosociological and agro-zootechnical analysis. This approach allows one to extend any type of heterogeneous data, provided this is in any way correlated to the intrinsic characteristics of the plant community, can be interpolated to the whole polygon and therefore to all polygons referring to the same phytosociological unit. In terms of planning and application, the results of phytosociological modelling are much more useful when integrated in a database (GIS), in which the different information levels, based on hierarchical criteria, are simulated in multiple polygon segmentations.

In particular, this method allows one to obtain a first general overview of the forage resource using the theoretical data linked to the phytosociological interpretation of the territory. Subsequently, this overview can be enhanced with actual quantitative data, offering also a qualitative dimension coming from the phytosociological aspects.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10028-009-0010-2 | Journal eISSN: 1854-9829 | Journal ISSN: 1581-4661
Language: English
Page range: 129 - 146
Published on: Jan 14, 2010
Published by: Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2010 Andrea Catorci, Sabrina Cesaretti, Renata Gatti, published by Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 8 (2009): Issue 2 (December 2009)