TY - JOUR AU - Theurillat, Jean-Paul AU - Di Pietro, Romeo AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Terzi, Massimo TI - Proposal (35) to conserve the name Festucion valesiacae JF - VEGETATION CLASSIFICATION AND SURVEY J2 - VEGET CLASS SURV VL - 4 PY - 2023 SP - 323 EP - 327 PG - 5 SN - 2683-0671 DO - 10.3897/VCS.108437 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34720241 ID - 34720241 AB - For ninety years, the alliance name Festucion valesiacae has been widely and almost exclusively used to designate the al­liance of steppic, xeric grasslands on deep soils from Central Europe to western Ukraine. However, there is an earlier, hardly used heterotypic synonym, the Festucion sulcatae , that would be the correct name according to the rules [recte: Festucion rupicolae nom. corr.]. In order to preserve a well-established name, we propose to conserve the name Festucion valesiacae against the name Festucion sulcatae . In addition, we typify the name Festucion rupicolae Soó 1930 nom. corr. with the association Festuco rupicolae-Stipetum pennatae Soó 1930 nom. corr., for which we also select a neotype. This proposal is supported by the fact that the alliance Festucion valesiacae is the conserved type of the order Festucetalia valesiacae . LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Rédei, Tamás AU - Barabás, Sándor AU - Locsmándi, Csaba AU - Mesterházy, Attila AU - Mészáros, A. AU - Molnár, Csaba AU - Vajna, Flóra AU - Takács, Attila TI - Taxonomical and chorological notes 18 (184–194). JF - STUDIA BOTANICA HUNGARICA J2 - STUD BOT HUNG VL - 54 PY - 2023 IS - 2 SP - 205 EP - 224 PG - 20 SN - 0301-7001 DO - 10.17110/StudBot.2023.54.2.205 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34557131 ID - 34557131 LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bauer, Norbert TI - Astragalus vesicarius and other new taxa to the flora of the Vértes Mountains (Hungary, Transdanubian Mts) JF - KITAIBELIA J2 - KITAIBELIA VL - 28 PY - 2023 IS - 2 SP - 195 EP - 199 PG - 5 SN - 1219-9672 DO - 10.17542/kit.28.042 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34484243 ID - 34484243 N1 - Export Date: 8 January 2024 Correspondence Address: Bauer, N.; Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum, Növénytár, Könyves K. krt. 40, Hungary; email: bauer.norbert@nhmus.hu LA - Hungarian DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kenyeres, Zoltán AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - ZUNA-KRATKY, Thomas AU - MAGYARI, Mate AU - SKEJO, Josip AU - KRISTIN, Anton TI - Recent growth in occurrences of Acrida ungarica (Orthoptera: Acrididae) at the northern margin of the species range: Is it the result of global warming? JF - EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY J2 - EUR J ENTOMOL VL - 120 PY - 2023 IS - 1 SP - 338 EP - 345 PG - 8 SN - 1210-5759 DO - 10.14411/eje.2023.035 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34378943 ID - 34378943 AB - The number of records of Acrida ungarica in novel habitats and in places where the species was considered extinct, has markedly increased in recent years. We hypothesized that the newly revealed occurrences, on the northern margin of the species range, were not due to an increase in survey effort, but rather a result of the warming climate in the Carpathian Basin. We studied the occurrence data of Acrida ungarica and the intensity of Orthoptera surveys over the period of 2002-2022 in 1,840 6 * 5.5 km grid cells of the Central European Flora Mapping System. As background variables, we included macroclimatic data and the vegetation cover of the main potential habitats. The number of grid cells containing A. ungarica was significantly higher than the corresponding increase in cells surveyed for orthopterans and the presence of sand and salt steppe habitats, respectively. Furthermore, from 2012 to 2022, significant increasing trends were revealed in effective heat summation above 10°C in the summer months. That the increase in the known distribution of A. ungarica is unrelated to the rise in survey intensity indicates that the species distribution seems to be increasing, making it one of the winners from global warming. At the same time, regional rising levels of disturbance (highway networks, large fallow areas) can contribute to the successful horizontal expansion of a species related to open habitats and this species tolerance of disturbance. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Verloove, Filip TI - The accelerated spread of a neophyte introduced to Europe long ago-First occurrence of Sporobolus indicus (Poaceae) in Hungary JF - ACTA BOTANICA CROATICA J2 - ACTA BOT CROAT VL - 82 PY - 2023 IS - 1 SP - 20 EP - 26 PG - 7 SN - 0365-0588 DO - 10.37427/botcro-2022-024 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33969707 ID - 33969707 N1 - Export Date: 9 February 2024 CODEN: ABCRA Correspondence Address: Bauer, N.; Hungarian Natural History Museum, Könyves K. krt. 40, Hungary; email: bauer.norbert@nhmus.hu AB - The first occurrence of Sporobolus indicus in Hungary is reported. The neotropical S. indicus is one of the oldest introduced neophytes to Europe. From the middle of the 19(th) century until the last decade of the 20(th) century, apart from a few occasional occurrences, it expanded only in the Mediterranean area. However, the number of observations has dramatically increased in the past two decades, even outside the Mediterranean region. Its recent rapid spread is evident along roads, on lawns and in tourist places subject to trampling (e.g., campsites). Tourism certainly contributes to the very successful recent diffusion of the species. Still, global warming, including the increasingly mild winters in continental Europe, can certainly enhance the establishment and further dispersal of this cold sensitive species. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kenyeres, Zoltán AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Andrasi, Lorinc AU - Kovacs, Peter AU - Markus, Andras AU - Saringer-Kenyeres, Tamas TI - Fine-scale analysis of the most important drivers of the Central European mosquito harm JF - HYDROBIOLOGIA J2 - HYDROBIOLOGIA VL - 850 PY - 2023 IS - 3 SP - 715 EP - 728 PG - 14 SN - 0018-8158 DO - 10.1007/s10750-022-05119-w UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33876228 ID - 33876228 AB - Detailed knowledge of the habitat requirements of mosquitoes is essential for the targeted control of vectors. Our research sought to answer how the circumstances of fine-scale habitat affect the density of mosquito species playing a pivotal role in human mosquito harm. During the study, CO2 trap collections were carried out for 15 weeks. Habitat mapping was carried out at a radius of 500, 1000, 1500 and 2000 m scales. Precipitation and water levels data of rivers were also included. We found that, in urbanized areas occupied by invasive species, mosquito species composition was strongly determined by the presence of artificial containers occurring in the narrow (radius < 500 m) environment. The cover of natural habitat types ideal for mosquito breeding sites at a greater distance (radius & GE; 2000 m) also play a decisive role in the organization of mosquito assemblages. In the environment of the inhabited regions (radius & GE; 2000 m), the large extent of the humid grasslands making a mosaic with forests is also beneficial for mosquito species feeding on humans. In Central Europe, in urban areas rich in temporarily water-covered mosquito breeding sites in a narrow habitat environment (radius < 1500 m), robust mosquito harm can appear within a week after significant precipitation or river floods during warm summers. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Süle, Gabriella AU - Miholcsa, Zsombor AU - Molnár, Csaba AU - Kovács-Hostyánszki, Anikó AU - Fenesi, Annamária AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Szigeti, Viktor TI - Escape from the garden: spreading, effects and traits of a new risky invasive ornamental plant (Gaillardia aristata Pursh) JF - NEOBIOTA J2 - NEOBIOTA VL - 83 PY - 2023 SP - 43 EP - 69 PG - 27 SN - 1619-0033 DO - 10.3897/neobiota.83.97325 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33713911 ID - 33713911 N1 - Funding Agency and Grant Number: National Research, Development and Innovation Office in Hungary [FK 123813, RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006]; Safeguarding European wild pollinators project - European Union [101003476] Funding text: We are grateful to Csaba Biro (Kiskunsag National Park) for drawing our attention to the invasion of Gaillardia aristata. We give thanks for the new occurrence data of G. aristata to Aron Bihaly, Aniko Csecserits, Laszlo Erdos, Maria Hohn, Szabolcs Kis, Balazs Kiss, Gyoergy Kohari, Gyoergy Kroeel-Dulay, Attila Lengyel, Zsolt Molnar, Katalin Pallag, Istvan Somogyi, Attila Steiner, Laszlo Timko, Zoltan Vajda and Vince Zsigmond. We also thank the contributors who uploaded data to Bartha et al. (2022) or any other online database (see Suppl. material 1). We are grateful to Petra Buru and Boglarka Berki for helping with the botanical sampling and to Eszter Ruprecht and Beatrix Balaji for providing data for the trait database. The study was funded by the National Research, Development and Innovation Office in Hungary (FK 123813 and RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006). Gabriella Suele was supported by the Safeguarding European wild pollinators project (grant agreement No. 101003476) funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme. Annamaria Fenesi was supported by NKFIH KKP 144068 during manuscript writing. AB - Ornamental plants constitute a major source of invasive species. Gaillardia aristata (great blanketflower) is planted worldwide and its escape has been reported in several European countries without ecological impact assessment on the invasive potential. As there is a markedly spreading population with invasive behaviour in Hungary, we aimed to reveal the distribution, impacts and traits of G. aristata . We gathered occurrence data outside the gardens in Hungary, based on literature, unpublished observations by experts and our own records. We investigated the impacts of an extended population, where the species invaded sandy old-fields within a 25 km 2 area. Here, we compared the species richness, diversity, community composition and height of invaded and uninvaded vegetation. Furthermore, we evaluated the traits potentially associated with the invasiveness of G. aristata in comparison with other herbaceous invasive species in the region. We found that G. aristata occurred mostly by casual escapes, but naturalised and invasive populations were also detected in considerable numbers. G. aristata usually appeared close to gardens and ruderal habitats, but also in semi-natural and natural grasslands and tended to spread better in sandy soils. We found lower plant species richness and Shannon diversity in the invaded sites and the invasion of G. aristata significantly influenced the composition of the plant community. The trait analyses revealed that the invasive potential of G. aristata is backed by a wide germination niche breadth, extremely long flowering period, small shoot-root ratio (large absorption and gripping surface), large seeds (longer persistence) and dispersal by epizoochory of grazing livestock (mostly by sheep), probably helping the species’ survival and spreading in the disturbed, species-poor, sandy, open habitats. These functional traits, as well as the ornamental utilisation, may act together with the aridisation of the climate and the changing land-use practices (e.g. abandoned, disturbed sites) in the success of G. aristata . We raise awareness of the rapid transition of G. aristata from ornamental plant to casual alien and then to invasive species in certain environmental conditions (i.e. sandy soils, species-poor communities, human disturbances), although it seems to be not a strong ecosystem transformer so far. Nonetheless, banning it from seed mixtures, developing eradication strategy and long-term monitoring of this species would be important to halt its spreading in time. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kenyeres, Zoltán AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Bertalan, László AU - Szabó, Gergely AU - Márkus, András AU - Sáringer-Kenyeres, Tamás AU - Szabó, Szilárd TI - Cost-benefit analysis of remote sensing data types for mapping mosquito breeding sites JF - SPATIAL INFORMATION RESEARCH J2 - SPAT INF RES VL - 31 PY - 2023 IS - 2 SP - 419 EP - 428 PG - 10 SN - 2366-3286 DO - 10.1007/s41324-023-00511-7 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33657250 ID - 33657250 AB - Environmentally friendly biological mosquito control by Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis formulations needs appropriate breeding maps. The mapping accuracy depends on the quality of the used remote sensing data. Further, the mapping is expected to be cost-efective. Our aim was to study the efect of the quality of various remote sensing data on the applicability of the maps. We depicted larval habitats by manual interpretation in Quantum GIS 3.16.1 software using remote sensing data of SENTINEL, Google Earth, commercial geoTIFF RGB orthophoto, individual unoccupied aerial systems (UAS) RGB, and multispectral mosaics. Based on our results, after classifcation of the target area by sorting, mixed-use of remote sensing data is required to achieve a highly cost-efcient mapping: RGB aerial photographs with 0.5 m per pixel resolution can be used efciently in areas dominated by grassland habitats, while forest areas need customised footage taken by UAS or drones during the foliage-free period (15 cm per pixel resolution, multispectral technique). Our cost-beneft analysis showed that the aim-optimised method could reduce investment to 6-8% and the cost of data collection to 20-50% of the highest budget. This result is signifcant for all participants of biological mosquito control. LA - English DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Kun, András AU - Exner, Tamás AU - Bauer, Norbert TI - A Torilis nodosa új behurcolásai és terjedése Magyarországon JF - KITAIBELIA J2 - KITAIBELIA VL - 28 PY - 2023 IS - 1 SP - 26 EP - 31 PG - 6 SN - 1219-9672 DO - 10.17542/kit.28.030 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33635602 ID - 33635602 N1 - Export Date: 11 December 2023 Correspondence Address: András, K.; Sziklagyep BtHungary; email: kunandras29@gmail.com LA - Hungarian DB - MTMT ER - TY - JOUR AU - Bauer, Norbert AU - Hüvös-Récsi, Annamária AU - Lőkös, László AU - Matus, Gábor AU - Sinigla, Mónika AU - Farkas, Edit TI - Distribution of Xanthoparmelia pulvinaris (Parmeliaceae) in Hungary JF - STUDIA BOTANICA HUNGARICA J2 - STUD BOT HUNG VL - 53 PY - 2022 IS - 2 SP - 113 EP - 135 PG - 23 SN - 0301-7001 DO - 10.17110/StudBot.2022.53.2.113 UR - https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33614790 ID - 33614790 AB - A synthesis on the distribution of the protected lichen species Xanthoparmelia pulvinaris in Hungary is provided. In addition to summarising the herbarium and published data, we have significantly increased the number of known occurrences with systematic field mapping and clarified the distribution pattern of the species in Hungary. The species occurs in the sandy areas of the Great Hungarian and the Little Hungarian Plains, in the southern and southeastern margins and sporadically in the inner hilly landscapes of the Transdanubian Mountain Ranges. Xanthoparmelia pulvinaris is a characteristic species of the open steppe habitats, further important evidence of the plant-geography and historical vegetation development relationships between the sandy grasslands of the plains and the limestone and dolomite rocky grasslands of the middle mountains. Its stronger stands persisted on the eastern edge of the Vértes Mts and in some sand steppes of good natural condition of the Great Hungarian Plain. Most of its mapped occurrences represent small, vulnerable populations. LA - English DB - MTMT ER -