Published on 01 January 2004

ELPA (European Leaf Physiognomic Approach): Grid data set of the leaf physiognomic composition of the extant European hardwood vegetation

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Traiser, Christopher;Mosbrugger, Volker

Description

Physiognomic traits of plant leaves such as size, shape or margin are decisively affected by the prevailing environmental conditions of the plant habitat. On the other hand, if a relationship between environment and leaf physiognomy can be shown to exist, vegetation represents a proxy for environmental conditions.This study investigates the relationship between physiognomic traits of leaves from European hardwood vegetation and environmental parameters in order to create a calibration dataset based on high resolution grid cell data. The leaf data are obtained from synthetic chorologic floras, the environmental data comprise climatic and ecologic data. The high resolution of the data allows for a detailed analysis of the spatial dependencies between the investigated parameters.The comparison of environmental parameters and leaf physiognomic characters reveals a clear correlation between temperature related parameters (e.g. mean annual temperature or ground frost frequency) and the expression of leaf characters (e.g. the type of leaf margin or the base of the lamina). Precipitation related parameters (e.g. mean annual precipitation), however, show no correlation with the leaf physiognomic composition of the vegetation. On the basis of these results, transfer functions for several environmental parameters are calculated from the leaf physiognomic composition of the extant vegetation.In a next step, a cluster analysis is applied to the dataset in order to identify “leaf physiognomic communities”. Several of these are distinguished, characterised and subsequently used for vegetation classification. Concerning the leaf physiognomic diversity there are precise differences between each of these "leaf physiognomic classes". There is a clear increase of leaf physiognomic diversity with increasing variability of the environmental parameters: Northern vegetation types are characterised by a more or less homogeneous leaf physiognomic composition whereas southern vegetation types like the Mediterranean vegetation show a considerable higher leaf physiognomic diversity.Finally, the transfer functions are used to estimate palaeo-environmental parameters of three fossil European leaf assemblages from Late Oligocene and Middle Miocene. The results are compared with results obtained from other palaeo-environmental reconstructing methods. The estimates based on a direct linear ordination seem to be the most realistic ones, as they are highly consistent with the Coexistence Approach.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

2.7

FAIR Score

92%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Plant Science

Field

Agricultural and Biological Sciences

Domain

Life Sciences

Confidence Score

93%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

ORDINAL NUMBERLATITUDELONGITUDELeaf simpleLeaf lobedLeaf margin, entireLeaf size nanophyll, < 5 mm**2Leaf size leptophyll 1, 5-20 mm2Leaf size leptophyll 2, 20-80 mm2Leaf size microphyll 1, 80-400 mm2Leaf size microphyll 2, 400-1400 mm2Leaf size microphyll 3, 1400-3600 mm2Leaf size mesophyll 1, 3600-6200 mm2Leaf size mesophyll 2, 6200-10000 mm2Leaf size mesophyll 3, > 10000 mm**2Leaf apex roundLeaf apex acuteLeaf apex emarginateLeaf base roundLeaf base acuteLeaf base cordateLeaf length/width ratio < 1:1Leaf length/width ratio 1-2:1Leaf length/width ratio 2-3:1Leaf length/width ratio 3-4:1Leaf length/width ratio > 4:1Leaf shape obovateLeaf shape ellipiticLeaf shape ovate

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00