Vegetation classification

Vegetation classification is the process of classifying and mapping the vegetation over an area of the earth's surface. Vegetation classification is often performed by state based agencies as part of land use, resource and environmental management. Many different methods of vegetation classification have been used. In general, there has been a shift from structural classification used by forestry for the mapping of timber resources, to floristic community mapping for biodiversity management. Whereas older forestry-based schemes considered factors such as height, species and density of the woody canopy, floristic community mapping shifts the emphasis onto ecological factors such as climate, soil type and floristic associations. Classification mapping is usually now done using geographic information systems (GIS) software.

Classification schemes

Following, some important classification schemes.

Köppen (1884)

Although this scheme is in fact of a climate classification, it has a deep relationship with vegetation studies:

Wagner & von Sydow (1888)

Wagner & von Sydow (1888) scheme: Vegetationsgürtel (vegetation belts):[1]

  • Tundren (tundra)
  • Hochgebirgsflora (mountain flora)
  • Vegetationsarme Gebiete (Wüsten) (vegetation poor areas [deserts])
  • der gemässigten zone (the temperate zone)
    • Grasland (prairie)
    • Vorherrschend Nadelwald (mainly coniferous forest)
    • Wald (Laub und Nadelwald) und Kulturland (forest [deciduous and coniferous forest] and cultivated land)
  • in tropischen und subtropischen Gebieten (in tropical and subtropical areas)
    • Grasland (prairie)
    • Wald und Kulturland (forest and cultivated land)
    • Urwald (jungle)

Warming (1895, 1909)

Warming (1895, 1909) oecological classes:[2][3]

  • A. The soil (in the widest sense) is very wet, and the abundant water is available to the plant (at least in Class 1), the formations are therefore more or less hydrophilous:
    • Class 1. Hydrophytes (of formations in water).
    • Class 2. Helophytes (of formations in marsh).
  • B. The soil is physiologically dry, i. e. contains water which is available to the plant only to a slight extent; the formations are therefore essentially composed of xerophilous species:
    • Class 3. Oxylophytes (of formations on sour (acid) soil).
    • Class 4. Psychrophytes (of formations on cold soil).
    • Class 5. Halophytes (of formations on saline soil).
  • C. The soil is physically dry, and its slight power of retaining water determines the vegetation, the climate being of secondary import; the formations are therefore likewise xerophilous:
    • Class 6. Lithophytes (of formations on rocks).
    • Class 7. Psammophytes (of formations on sand and gravel).
    • Class 8. Chersophytes (of formations on waste land).
  • D. The climate is very dry and decides the character of the vegetation; the properties of the soil are dominated by climate; the formations are also xerophilous:
    • Class 9. Eremophytes (of formations on desert and steppe).
    • Class 10. Psilophytes (of formations on savannah).
    • Class 11. Sclerophyllous formations (bush and forest).
  • E. The soil is physically or physically dry:
    • Class 12. Coniferous formations (forest).
  • F. Soil and climate favour the development of mesophilous formations:
    • Class 13. Mesophytes.

Warming's types of formations:

  • 1. Microphyte-formation
  • 2. Moss-formation
  • 3. Herb-formation
  • 4. Dwarf-shrub formations and undershrub-formations
  • 5. Bush-wood or shrub-wood
  • 6. Forest
    • High forest
    • Underwood
    • Forest-floor vegetation
  • Other
    • Simple formations
    • Compound formations
    • Mixed formations
    • Secondary formations
    • Sub-formations

Schimper (1898, 1903)

Schimper (1898, 1903) climatic chief formation types:[4]

  • Woodland, forest, bushwood, shrubwood
  • Grassland, meadow (hygrophilous or tropophilous), steppe (xerophilous), savannah (xerophilous grassland containing isolated trees)
  • Desert (dry or cold)

Schimper formation types across the zones and regions

  • Tropical zone formations
    • Climatic formations
      • Tropical districts constantly moist
        • Rain-forest
      • Tropical districts with pronounced dry seasons
        • Woodland formations (monsoon-forest, savannah-forest, thorn-forest)
        • Grassland formations
      • Tropical deserts
    • Edaphic formations
      • In Tropical Inland Country
      • In Tropical Sea-shore
  • Temperate zone formations
    • Climatic formations
      • Warm temperate belts
        • Subtropical districts
        • Constantly moist districts (without a dry season)
        • Moist summer districts
        • Moist winter districts
      • Cold temperate belts
      • Temperate deserts
    • Edaphic formations
      • Littoral Formations
      • Heath
      • Moors
  • Arctic zone formations
    • Tundra, moss-tundra, lichen-tundra, moors, oases
  • Mountain climate formations (basal region, montane region, alpine region)
    • In the tropics
    • In the temperate zones
  • Aquatic vegetation
    • Marine vegetation
    • Freshwater vegetation

Schimper & Faber (1935)

Formation-types:[5][6]

  • 1. Tropical rainforest
  • 2. Subtropical rainforest
  • 3. Monsoon forest
  • 4. Temperate rainforest
  • 5. Summer-green deciduous forest
  • 6. Needle-leaf forest
  • 7. Evergreen hardwood forest
  • 8. Savanna woodland
  • 9. Thorn forest and scrub
  • 10. Savanna
  • 11. Steppe and semidesert
  • 12. Heath
  • 13. Dry desert
  • 14. Tundra and cold woodland
  • 15. Cold desert

Ellenberg & Mueller-Dombois (1967)

Ellenberg and Mueller-Dombois (1967) scheme:

  • Formation-class I. Closed forests
  • Formation-class II. Woodlands
  • Formation-class III. Fourrés (shrublands or thickets)
  • Formation-class IV. Dwarf-scrub and related communities
  • Formation-class V. Terrestrial herbaceous communities
  • Formation-class VI. Deserts and other scarcely vegetated areas
  • Formation-class VII. Aquatic plant formations[7]

Oliveira-Filho (2009, 2015)

A vegetation classification with six main criteria ("hierarchical attributes", with exemplified categories applicable mainly to Neotropical region):[8][9]

  • A. Basic vegetation physiognomies
    • 1. Forest physiognomies
    • 2. Shrubland physiognomies
    • 3. Savanna physiognomies
    • 4. Grassland physiognomies
    • 5. Man-made physiognomies
  • B. Climatic regime
    • Maritime
    • Semi-arid
    • Seasonal
    • Rain
    • Cloud
  • C. Leaf flush regime
    • Evergreen
    • Semideciduous
    • Deciduous
    • Alternate
    • Ephemeral
  • D. Thermal realm
    • Tropical
    • Subtropical, etc.
  • E. Elevation range
    • Coastal
    • Lower plains
    • Upper plains
    • Lower highlands
    • Upper highlands
    • Montane
  • F. Substrate
    • Shallow soils
    • Deep soils
    • Soily
    • Sandy
    • Gravelly
    • Rocky
    • Dystrophic
    • Mesotrophic
    • Eutrophic
    • Ridge
    • Slope
    • Thalweg
    • Riverine
    • Floodplain
    • Marshy
    • Swampy

Other

Other important schemes: Grisebach (1872), Tansley and Chipp (1926), Rübel (1930), Burtt Davy (1938), Beard (1944, 1955), André Aubréville (1956, 1957), Trochain (1955, 1957), Dansereau (1958), Küchler (1967).[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

In the sixties, A. W. Kuchler coordinated an extensive review of vegetation maps from all the continents, compiling the terminology used for the types of vegetation.[22]

gollark: I mean, "allowlist" sounds like it should *only* be the whitelist, surely.
gollark: How odd.
gollark: The great thing about C's terrible includes is that you can do this trivially.
gollark: Just copypaste GMP into your code.
gollark: I don't know the exact details, it just prevents you using the key if you don't have the passphrase to type in.

See also

References

  1. Wagner, H. & von Sydow, E. 1888. Sydow-Wagners methodischer Schulatlas. Gotha: Perthes, . 23th (last) ed., 1944, .
  2. Warming, E. (1895). Plantesamfund - Grundtræk af den økologiske Plantegeografi. P.G. Philipsens Forlag, Kjøbenhavn. 335 pp.
  3. Warming, E. (1909). Oecology of Plants. An introduction to the study of plant-communities, translated by P. Groom and I. B. Balfour. Clarendon Press, Oxford. 422 pp. BHL.
  4. Schimper, A. F. W. 1898. Pflanzen-Geographie auf physiologischer Grundlage. Fisher, Jena. 876 pp. English translation, 1903, .
  5. Beard J.S. (1978). The Physiognomic Approach. In: R. H. Whittaker (editor). Classification of Plant Communities, pp 33-64, .
  6. Schimper, A.F.W. & Faber, F.C. von. (1935). Pflanzengeographie auf physiologischer Grundlage. 3rd ed. Jena: Fischer.
  7. Ellenberg, H. & D. Mueller-Dombois. 1967. Tentative physiognomic-ecological classification of plant formations of the Earth [based on a discussion draft of the UNESCO working group on vegetation classification and mapping.] Berichte des Geobotanischen Institutes der Eidg. Techn. Hochschule, Stiftung Rübel, Zürich 37 (1965-1966): 21—55, .
  8. Oliveira-Filho, A. T. 2009. Classificação das Fitofisionomias da América do Sul extra-Andina: Proposta de um novo sistema – prático e flexível – ou uma injeção a mais de caos?. Rodriguésia 60 (2): 237-258, .
  9. Oliveira-Filho, A.T. 2015. Um sistema de classificação fisionômico-ecológica da vegetação Neotropical: segunda aproximação. In: Felfili, J.M.; Eisenlohr, P.V.; Melo, M.M.R.F. Andrade, L.A.; Meira Neto J.A.A. (Eds.). Fitossociologia no Brasil: Métodos e estudos de casos, vol. 2, Editora UFV, Viçosa, cap. 19, p. 452, .
  10. Grisebach, A. (1872). Die Vegetation der Erde nach ihrer klimatischen Anordnung. Ein Abriß der Vergleichenden Geographie der Pflanzen. 1st ed. Leipzig: W. Engelmann., 2 vol. Band I: xii + 603 p., ; Band II: x + 635 p., . 2nd ed. 1884.
  11. Tansley, A. G. & Chipp, T. F. (1926). Aims and Methods in the Study of Vegetation. The British Empire Vegetation Committee, Whitefriars Press, London. 383 pp.
  12. Rübel, E. F. 1930. Pflanzengesellschaften der Erde. Bern: Verlag Hans Huber. 464 pp.
  13. Burtt-Davy, J. (1938). The classification of tropical woody vegetation types. Oxford: University of Oxford, Imperial Forestry Institute. 85 p. (Institute paper, n. 13).
  14. Beard, J. S. (1944). Climax vegetation in tropical America. Ecology 25: 127-158.
  15. Beard, J. S. (1955). The classification of tropical American vegetation-types. Ecology 36: 89-100.
  16. Aubréville, A. (1956). Essai de classification et de nomenclature des formations forestières africaines avec extension du système propose à toutes les formations du monde tropical. In: C.S.A. Specialist Meeting on Phyto-geography, Yangambi, Congo, 1956. Réunion de spécialistes du C.S.A. en matière de phytogéographie. London: Commission for Technical Co-operation in Africa South of the Sahara - CCTA, Scientific Council for Africa South of the Sahara - CSA. p. 247-288.
  17. Aubréville A. 1957. Accord à Yangambi sur la nomenclature des types africains de végétation. Bois et Forêts des Tropiques 51, 23-27, .
  18. Trochain, J.-L. (1955). Nomenclature et classification des milieux végétaux en Afrique noire française. In: Colloque international du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique - CNRS, 59, sur les régions écologiques du globe, Paris, juillet 1954. Annales de biologie, t. XXXI, fasc. 5-6, pp. 73-93, .
  19. Trochain, J.-L. (1957). Accord interafricain sur la définition des types de végétation de l’Afrique tropicale. Bulletin de l’Institut d’Études Centraficanes. Nouvelle Série, Brazzavilie [Congo], v. 13/14, p. 55-93.
  20. Dansereau, P. A universal system for recording vegetation. Montreal, University of Canada, Institute of Botany, 1958. 57 p.
  21. Küchler, A. W. (1967). Vegetation Mapping. New York, NY. Ronald Press. 472 pp.
  22. Küchler, A. W. (1965-1970). International bibliography of vegetation maps. Lawrence, Kansas: University of Kansas Libraries. 5 vol. . [2nd ed., 1980, .]
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