Cargando…

The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation

The role of anthropogenically influenced habitats in conserving elements of the original wildlife has increased worldwide simultaneously with the disappearance of natural sites. Burial places are able to conserve original elements of the wildlife, and this fact has been known for at least a century....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Löki, Viktor, Schmotzer, András, Takács, Attila, Süveges, Kristóf, Lovas‐Kiss, Ádám, Lukács, Balázs András, Tökölyi, Jácint, Molnár V., Attila
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7391536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32760544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6476
_version_ 1783564656059613184
author Löki, Viktor
Schmotzer, András
Takács, Attila
Süveges, Kristóf
Lovas‐Kiss, Ádám
Lukács, Balázs András
Tökölyi, Jácint
Molnár V., Attila
author_facet Löki, Viktor
Schmotzer, András
Takács, Attila
Süveges, Kristóf
Lovas‐Kiss, Ádám
Lukács, Balázs András
Tökölyi, Jácint
Molnár V., Attila
author_sort Löki, Viktor
collection PubMed
description The role of anthropogenically influenced habitats in conserving elements of the original wildlife has increased worldwide simultaneously with the disappearance of natural sites. Burial places are able to conserve original elements of the wildlife, and this fact has been known for at least a century. To this day, little is known about long‐time changes and the effect of long‐time management methods in cemeteries on the flora they harbor. The utility of historical maps in research focused on natural values, as well as in answering questions related to conservation was recently demonstrated, but the use of digitized historical maps in biodiversity research of the Carpathian Basin is very limited. In the present paper, we aimed to predict the conservation potential of long‐established and newly established cemeteries of Hungarian settlements with various population sizes based on the digitized maps of the 2nd Military Survey of the Austrian Empire (1819–1869), by categorizing cemeteries into 3 distinct (anthropogenic habitat, cemetery, or natural habitat) types. To build our models, we used records of the protected flora from Hungarian cemeteries, based on data of thematic botanical surveys of 991 cemeteries. Out of the surveyed cemeteries, 553 (56%) harbored protected plants, totaling 306.617 estimated individuals of 92 protected species, belonging to 28 plant families. These species represent 12% of the entire protected flora of Hungary. Hungarian cemeteries play a key role mainly in preserving steppe and dry grassland plant species. Long‐established and large cemeteries harbor more protected plant species than small and newly established ones. Human population size of the settlements correlated negatively with the number of protected species and individuals. Moreover, woodland cover and proportion of grassland also significantly positively affected the number of protected plant species in cemeteries.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7391536
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-73915362020-08-04 The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation Löki, Viktor Schmotzer, András Takács, Attila Süveges, Kristóf Lovas‐Kiss, Ádám Lukács, Balázs András Tökölyi, Jácint Molnár V., Attila Ecol Evol Original Research The role of anthropogenically influenced habitats in conserving elements of the original wildlife has increased worldwide simultaneously with the disappearance of natural sites. Burial places are able to conserve original elements of the wildlife, and this fact has been known for at least a century. To this day, little is known about long‐time changes and the effect of long‐time management methods in cemeteries on the flora they harbor. The utility of historical maps in research focused on natural values, as well as in answering questions related to conservation was recently demonstrated, but the use of digitized historical maps in biodiversity research of the Carpathian Basin is very limited. In the present paper, we aimed to predict the conservation potential of long‐established and newly established cemeteries of Hungarian settlements with various population sizes based on the digitized maps of the 2nd Military Survey of the Austrian Empire (1819–1869), by categorizing cemeteries into 3 distinct (anthropogenic habitat, cemetery, or natural habitat) types. To build our models, we used records of the protected flora from Hungarian cemeteries, based on data of thematic botanical surveys of 991 cemeteries. Out of the surveyed cemeteries, 553 (56%) harbored protected plants, totaling 306.617 estimated individuals of 92 protected species, belonging to 28 plant families. These species represent 12% of the entire protected flora of Hungary. Hungarian cemeteries play a key role mainly in preserving steppe and dry grassland plant species. Long‐established and large cemeteries harbor more protected plant species than small and newly established ones. Human population size of the settlements correlated negatively with the number of protected species and individuals. Moreover, woodland cover and proportion of grassland also significantly positively affected the number of protected plant species in cemeteries. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7391536/ /pubmed/32760544 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6476 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Löki, Viktor
Schmotzer, András
Takács, Attila
Süveges, Kristóf
Lovas‐Kiss, Ádám
Lukács, Balázs András
Tökölyi, Jácint
Molnár V., Attila
The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title_full The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title_fullStr The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title_full_unstemmed The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title_short The protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in Hungary: Using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
title_sort protected flora of long‐established cemeteries in hungary: using historical maps in biodiversity conservation
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7391536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32760544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6476
work_keys_str_mv AT lokiviktor theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT schmotzerandras theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT takacsattila theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT suvegeskristof theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT lovaskissadam theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT lukacsbalazsandras theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT tokolyijacint theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT molnarvattila theprotectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT lokiviktor protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT schmotzerandras protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT takacsattila protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT suvegeskristof protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT lovaskissadam protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT lukacsbalazsandras protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT tokolyijacint protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation
AT molnarvattila protectedfloraoflongestablishedcemeteriesinhungaryusinghistoricalmapsinbiodiversityconservation