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Library Ecosystem classification for EU habitat distribution assessment in sandy coastal environments: An application in central Italy

Ecosystem classification for EU habitat distribution assessment in sandy coastal environments: An application in central Italy

Ecosystem classification for EU habitat distribution assessment in sandy coastal environments: An application in central Italy

Resource information

Date of publication
december 2008
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201300878364
Pages
99-107

Many recent developments in coastal science have gone against the demands of European Union legislation. Coastal dune systems which cover small areas of the earth can host a high level of biodiversity. However, human pressure on coastal zones around the world has increased dramatically in the last 50 years. In addition to direct habitat loss, the rapid extinction of many species that are unique to these systems can be attributed to landscape deterioration through the lack of appropriate management. In this paper, we propose to use of an ecosystem classification technique that integrates potential natural vegetation distribution as a reference framework for coastal dune EU Habitats (92/43) distribution analysis and assessment. As an example, the present study analyses the EU Habitats distribution within a hierarchical ecosystem classification of the coastal dune systems of central Italy. In total, 24 land elements belonging to 8 land units, 5 land facets, 2 land systems and 2 land regions were identified for the coastal dunes of central Italy, based on diagnostic land attributes. In central Italy, coastal dune environments including all the beach area, mobile dunes and all the fixed-dune land elements contain or could potentially hold at least one EU habitat of interest. Almost all dune slack transitions present the potentiality for the spontaneous development of EU woodlands of interest. The precise information concerning these ecosystems distribution and ecological relationships that this method produces, makes it very effective in Natura 2000 European network assessment. This hierarchical ecosystem classification method facilitates the identification of areas to be surveyed and eventually bound, under the implementation of EU Habitat directive (92/43) including areas with highly disturbed coastal dune ecosystems.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Carranza, Maria Laura
Acosta, Alicia T. R.
Stanisci, Angela
Pirone, Gianfranco
Ciaschetti, Giampiero

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus