Actualización del catálogo sintaxonómico de Chile. I. Clases confirmadas.

  1. Francisco Javier Amigo Vázquez 6
  2. Miguel Álvarez García 2
  3. Lorena Flores Toro 7
  4. Federico Luebert 1
  5. Carlos Ramírez 4
  6. Manuel Antonio Rodríguez Guitián 3
  7. Cristina San Martin 5
  1. 1 Departamento de Silvicultura, Campus Antumapu, Universidad de Chile, Avda. Santa Rosa 11315, La Pintana. Santiago (Chile)
  2. 2 INRES / Vegetation Ecology. University of Bonn. Nussallee 1. 53115 Bonn (Alemania).
  3. 3 Departament of Plant Production and Engineering Projects. Higher Polytechnic Engineering School. Universidade de Santiago de Compostela (USC). 27002 Lugo (Spain)
  4. 4 Department of Ecology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Santiago (Chile)
  5. 5 Earth Sciences & Herbarium Institute, Faculty of Sciences, Universidad Austral de Chile. Valdivia (Chile).
  6. 6 Dpto. de Botánica. Facultad de Farmacia. Universidad de Santiago de Compostela. 15782 Santiago de Compostela (España)
  7. 7 Escuela de Ciencias Agrícolas, Universidad Viña del Mar. Agua Santa #7055, Viña del Mar, Valparaíso (Chile)
Revista:
International journal of geobotanical research

ISSN: 2253-6302 2253-6515

Ano de publicación: 2022

Volume: 11

Número: 2

Páxinas: 11-84

Tipo: Artigo

DOI: 10.5616/IJGR GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso aberto editor

Outras publicacións en: International journal of geobotanical research

Obxectivos de Desenvolvemento Sustentable

Resumo

Studies on vascular vegetation following the Sigmatist phytosociological methodology have a long tradition in Chile, especially in its central-Southern portion, which coincides with an extratropical territory with Mediterranean and Temperate bioclimates, with remark-able parallelism with Western Europe. However apart from numerous descriptions of all types of plant communities, no compilation trials had been carried out of all the possible orthodoxly described phytosociological units, excepting some partial attempts related to representative forest associations of many of its climax forests. An attempt is presented to bring together all the phytosociological units that have been proposed to describe its vegetation, distinguishing two levels: i) the phytosociological classes confirmed to be present in Chile because there are published associations supported by complete vegetation releves usable as a sufficient original diagnosis (in the meaning expressed by the International Code of Phytosociological Nomenclature); ii) other poorly documented classes, proposed as provisional or uncertainly differentiated from some of the classes in the first group. In this publication, the classes of the first group are brought together, detailing their diversification into orders, alliances and recognizable associations in Chile for each of them.