Publications by authors named "L M Demeter"

Article Synopsis
  • Geophytes, like Colchicum bulbocodium, are often overlooked in conservation efforts, despite their significance in early spring ecosystems and complex life cycles.
  • Weather factors such as temperature, precipitation, and light greatly influence their life cycles, but these effects can vary widely, making understanding them crucial for effective conservation strategies.
  • The study found that rising temperatures and insufficient cold periods negatively impact all life stages of C. bulbocodium, revealing that relying on a single year's flowering count can significantly underestimate population size, emphasizing the need for multi-year monitoring after colder, wetter conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Indigenous and traditional practices, rooted in ethnoecological knowledge, are essential for maintaining biodiversity and promoting sustainable use of resources.
  • - Collaborations between Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and ecologists lead to better insights and more equitable approaches to understanding and managing nature.
  • - The text highlights critical areas where these partnerships can significantly enhance scientific research, inform policy decisions, and improve ecological practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prevailing paradigm about the Quaternary ecological and evolutionary history of Central European ecosystems is that they were repeatedly impoverished by regional extinctions of most species during the glacial periods, followed by massive recolonizations from southern and eastern refugia during interglacial periods. Recent literature partially contradicts this view and provides evidence to re-evaluate this Postglacial Recolonization Hypothesis and develop an alternative one. We examined the long-term history of the flora of the Carpathian (Pannonian) Basin by synthesising recent advances in ecological, phylogeographical, palaeoecological and palaeoclimatological research, and analysing the cold tolerance of the native flora of a test area (Hungary, the central part of the Carpathian Basin).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Traditional knowledge is key for sustainability, but it is rapidly disappearing. Pig keeping in forests and marshes is an ancient, once widespread, now vanishing practice, with a major economic and ecological potential. The knowledge of pig keepers and the foraging activity of pigs are hardly documented.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The high nature conservation value of floodplain ecosystems is severely threatened by invasive alien species. Besides adversely affecting native biodiversity, these species also pose a major threat from a wider socio-ecological perspective (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF