D 2015

Botanical survey and successional changes of vegetation in pools after restoration project in wetland near the Cisarska cave, Moravian Karst

NOVÁKOVÁ, Eliška; Martin JIROUŠEK; Zdeněk MUSIL and Petra ŠTĚPÁNKOVÁ

Basic information

Original name

Botanical survey and successional changes of vegetation in pools after restoration project in wetland near the Cisarska cave, Moravian Karst

Name in Czech

Botanický průzkum a sukcesní změny vegetace na tůních vytvořených během revitalizace mokřadu u Císařské jeskyně v Moravském krasu

Authors

NOVÁKOVÁ, Eliška; Martin JIROUŠEK; Zdeněk MUSIL and Petra ŠTĚPÁNKOVÁ

Edition

2015. vyd. Brno, MendelNet 2015 – Proceedings of International PhD Students Conference, p. 68-73, 2015

Publisher

Mendel University in Brno

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Proceedings paper

Field of Study

Diseases, pests, weeds and plant protection

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Publication form

electronic version available online

References:

URL

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/15:00084708

Organization

Přírodovědecká fakulta – Repository – Repository

ISBN

978-80-7509-363-9

UT WoS

000366466100011

Keywords in English

weed; plant invasion; Littorelletea uniflorae; vascular plants; bryophytes

Links

GB14-36079G, research and development project.
Changed: 2/9/2020 09:53, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Three shallow pools were done during the restoration project in 2012, with a goal to create a suitable habitat for competitively weak wetland species surviving on the long -term drained locality only in a seed bank. After that, the floristic and phytosociological research was done for whole area of the wetland with special attention to pools, where succession of vegetation was continuously monitored on permanent plots. In total, 101 taxa of vascular plants and bryophytes were recorded on the study site (57 of them in the permanent plots in pools), nine recorded plant species are endangered in the Czech Republic. Vegetation of the study site consists predominantly of tall sedges in most wet places, surrounded by abandoned drained wet meadows. Vegetation of oligotrophic water bodies quickly enveloped in dug pools. During our 2-year monitoring, continual successional change of vegetation was found, with the gradual infiltration of species from surrounding vegetation. Strong effect on the vegetation has also the fluctuating water level. We assume that in the long-term perspective, both the hydrological conditions and other restoration activities will be crucial for surviving of competitively weak endangered wetland species on the locality.
Displayed: 6/5/2026 15:36