Epilobietea angustifolii Tx. et Preising ex von Rochow 1951
Tall-herb semi-natural perennial vegetation on disturbed forest edges, nutrient-rich riparian fringes an in forest clearings in the temperate and boreal zones of Eurasia
Epilobietea angustifolii Tx. et Preising ex von Rochow 1951
EuroVegChecklist name (Mucina et al. 2016)
Epilobietea angustifolii Tx. et Preising ex von Rochow 1951
Remarks
EuroVegChecklist
epi01 | Dengler et al. (2007) included the contents of the Epilobietea angustifolii (as a subclass − the Senecioni sylvatici-Epilobienea angustifolii) into a broadly conceived Artemisietea vulgaris, but excluded the communities of wet sites (Convolvuletalia sepium). (L. Mucina).
Epilobietea angustifolii Tx. et Preising in Br-Bl. et al. 1952
(31)
Epilobietea angustifolii Tx. et Preising in Tx. 1950
(2b)
Filipendulo ulmariae-Calystegietea sepium Géhu et Géhu-Franck 1987 (orig.form) (in Julve 1993)
(2b, mut.superfl.)
Filipendulo ulmariae-Convolvuletea sepium Géhu et Géhu-Franck 1987
(2b)
– epi03 Some recent syntaxonomic schemes (Géhu & Géhu-Franck 1987; Theurillat et al. 1995; Stortelder et al. 1999; Bardat et al. 2004; Berg et al. 2004; de Foucault 2011) suggest to exclude the Filipendula-rich tall-herb stands of fallow wet meadows and along ditches from the Molinio-Arrhenatheretea (which would then be restricted to mown, grazed or trampled communities) and combine these with the Convolvuletalia sepium currently within the Epilobietea angustifolii) and the Petasito-Chaerophylletalia (currently within the Mulgedio-Aconitetea) into a class in its own right − the Filipendulo-Convolvuletea. However, the class name has only been published invalidly by Géhu & Géhu-Franck (1987) and not yet validated. (J. Dengler) De Foucault (2011) chose the Convolvuletalia sepium as the type of the Filipendulo-Calystegietea. (L. Mucina) Some authors (L. Mucina, M. Chytrý, M. Valachovič) do not recognise the logic of lumping eutrophic synanthropic fringe communities (Convolvuletalia sepium) with the natural tall-herb communities of the meadows fringes classified as the Filipenduletalia (here included into the Molinietalia) and the eutrophic natural high-altitude tall-herb riparian communities (Petasito-Chaerophylletalia). Through the typification of the Galio-Urticetea by choosing Convolvuletalia sepium as the typus nominis and choosing the latter order as the types of the Filipendulo-Calystegietea, the latter class becomes a synonym of the Galio-Urticetea and hence of the Epilobietea angustifolii. (L. Mucina).
Galio aparines-Urticetea maioris Passarge ex Kopecký 1969 (orig.form) (sensu Rivas-Martínez et al. 2011: 250)
(phantom)
Galio-Urticetea Passarge ex Kopecký 1969
(syntax.syn.)
– epi02 The incorporation of the Galio-Urticetea that became a widely accepted class concept all over the Central Europe (see for instance Mucina 1993b; Berg et al. 2001, 2004; Jarolímek et al. 2007; Chytrý 2009; Borhidi et al. 2012 etc.) into the Epilobietea angustifolii is an unusual and bold step recognising the ecological and floristic similarity among the ruderal (both anthropogenic and natural) communities of nutrient-rich, well moistened soils. (L. Mucina).
Galio-Urticetea Passarge 1967
(3b)
Chamaenerietea Mititelu et Barabaş 1972
(syntax.syn.)