Publications by authors named "Klara Rehounkova"

Article Synopsis
  • Achieving global restoration targets is hindered by challenges such as the need for long-term research, effective monitoring, and adequate funding, which are often insufficient, reducing restoration efficacy.
  • The study focuses on ecological restoration practices within the pan-European region of the Long-term Ecological Research Network (eLTER) and highlights its vital role in implementing the EU Nature Restoration Law.
  • An online questionnaire identified 62 experts and 42 projects across 18 countries, revealing that most projects are monitored long-term, though there is a lack of standardized protocols for evaluation, with eLTER providing crucial data, reference ecosystems, and stakeholder support.
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Open interior sands represent a highly threatened habitat in Europe. In recent times, their associated organisms have often found secondary refuges outside their natural habitats, mainly in sand pits. We investigated the effects of different restoration approaches, i.

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Seed characteristics play an important role in the colonization and subsequent persistence of species during succession in disturbed sites and thus may contribute to being able to predict restoration success. In the present study, we investigated how various seed characteristics participated in 11 spontaneous successional series running in different mining sites (spoil heaps, extracted sand and sand-gravel pits, extracted peatlands, and stone quarries) in the Czech Republic, Central Europe. Using 1864 samples from 1- to 100-years-old successional stages, we tested whether species optimum along the succession gradient could be predicted using 10 basic species traits connected with diaspores and dispersal.

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Vegetation development of sites restored by two different methods, spontaneous revegetation and forestry reclamation, was compared in four sand pit mining complexes located in the southern part of the Czech Republic, central Europe. The space-for-time substitution method was applied to collect vegetation records in 13 differently aged and sufficiently large sites with known history. The restoration method, age (time since site abandonment/reclamation), groundwater table, slope, and aspect in all sampled plots were recorded in addition to the visual estimation of percentage cover of all present vascular plant species.

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We performed detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) ordination to compare seven successional seres running in stone quarries, coal mining spoil heaps, sand and gravel pits, and extracted peatlands in the Czech Republic in central Europe. In total, we obtained 1,187 vegetation samples containing 705 species. These represent various successional stages aged from 1 to 100 years.

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