ANALYSIS OF THE SPONTANEOUS FLORA OF THE TROSTIANETS DENDROLOGICAL PARK (CHERNIHIV OBLAST, UKRAINE)

Maryna Tarabun, Oleksandr Shynder, Vitaliy Kolomiychuk, Ihor Goncharenko


DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/sbi.2001.861

Abstract


Background. Trostianets Dendrological Park of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, founded in the nineteenth century in Chernihiv Oblast and now within Ichnianskyi National Nature Park, combines historic plantations with distinct forest-meadow sites. It provides a workable model for assessing how long-term introductions, climate change, and recreation pressure reshape spontaneous floras of the Left-Bank Forest-Steppe.
Materials and Methods. In 2022–2024, we inventoried all wild vascular plants. For each taxon, we noted native or alien status, geographical element (Kleopov, 1990), life form (Clements, 1920; Raunkiaer, 1934), vegetation class (EuroVegChecklist), and CSR strategy.
Results and Discussion. The inventory lists 423 species in 73 families, among which native plants (70.92 %) dominate. The geographical spectrum is dominated by widespread species (58.66 %), which are generally more anthropotolerant, while among zonal geoelements, species with “northern” (21.0 %) and “southern” (20.34 %) distribution types are nearly equally represented. Alien plants hail mainly from America (30.1 %) – almost all of them from North America – as well as from Asia and the Mediterranean (24.4 % each). In the biomorphological structure, perennial herbs prevail among native plants (66.3%), while short-lived herbs dominate among alien plants (38.2 %). Native plants richness peaks in Molinio-Arrhenatheretea, Carpino-Fagetea, and Trifolio-Geranietea, while alien plants cluster in Robinietea, Rhamno-Prunetea, and Sisymbrietea. Violents dominate both fractions (47.8 % natives, 43.4 % aliens); ISR reveals only a slight excess of stress-tolerators among natives and ruderals among aliens, confirming strong anthropogenic pressure.
Conclusion. Trostianets Dendrological Park hosts a rich, anthropotolerant spontaneous flora that preserves a forest-steppe core while harbouring many naturalised introduced plants, mainly woody ergasiophygophytes (69.74 % among alien plants). Its balanced yet distorted geographical profile and near-equal stress-tolerant/ruderal ratios form a baseline for tracking vegetation change in historical parks and justify measures to curb further alien spread and maintain meadow–forest mosaics.


Keywords


alien plants, biodiversity, historical parks, inventory, naturalization

Full Text:

PDF

References


Bomanowska, A., Kurzac, M., & Stefaniak, A. (2012). Floristic diversity of plants spontaneously spreading in the botanical garden of the University of Łódź (Poland). Biologica Nyssana, 3(1), 1-10.
Google Scholar

Burda, R. I., & Koniakin, S. N. (2019). The non-native woody species of the flora of Ukraine: introduction, naturalization, and invasion. Biosystems Diversity, 27(3), 276-290. doi:10.15421/011937
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Clements, F. (1920). Plant indicators: the relation of plant communities to process and practice. (No. 290). Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.28569
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Didukh, Y. P. (2023). World of plants of Ukraine in aspect of climate change. Kyiv: Naukova Dumka. doi:10.15407/978-966-00-1868-6 (In Ukrainian)
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Doiko, N., Shynder, O., & Dragan, N. (2021). Regional features and long-term dynamics of flora of the Arboretum Oleksandriya of the NAS of Ukraine (Bila Tserkva, Kyiv region). Ecological Sciences, 7(34), 81-90. doi:10.32846/2306-9716/2021.eco.7-34.14 (In Ukrainian)
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Galera, H., & Sudnik-Wojcikowska, B. (2010). Central European botanic gardens as centres of dispersal of alien plants. Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae, 79(2), 147-156. doi:10.5586/asbp.2010.020
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Goncharenko, I. V. (2017). Fitoindykatsiia antropohennoho navantazhennia [Phytoindication of anthropogenic factor]. Dnipro: Serednyak T. K. Retrieved from https://geobot.org.ua/files/publication/2358/goncharenko2017phytoindicationofanthropogenicfactorinukrainian.pdf (In Ukrainian)

Grime, J. P. (1977). Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory. The American Naturalist, 111(982), 1169-1194. doi:10.1086/283244
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Havrylenko, N. O., Moysiyenko, I. I., & Shapoval, V. V. (2008). Spontaneous flora of the Dendrological Park "Askania Nova". News Biosphere Reserve "Askania Nova", 10, 49-73. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Iljenko, A. A., & Medvedev, V. A. (2009). The dynamics of specific and spatial structure of coastal landscape plantings of Bolshoy Prud of Dendropark Trostyanets. Plant Introduction, 42(2), 75-84. (In Russian)
Google Scholar

Khodosovtsev, O. E., Moisienko, I. I., Boyko, M. F., Kunts, B., Melnyk, R. P., Zagorodnyuk, N. V., ... & Malyuga, N. G. (2019). Starovynni zabuti parky Khersonshchyny [Ancient forgotten parks of Kherson region]. Kherson: Helvetica. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Kleopov, Y. D. (1990). Analiz flori shirokolistvennikh lesov Yevropeiskoi chasti SSSR [Analysis of the flora of deciduous forests of the European part of the USSR]. Kiev: Naukova Dumka. (In Russian)
Google Scholar

Kokhno, M. A. (Ed.). (2002). Dendroflora Ukrainy. Dykorosli y kultyvovani dereva i kushchi. Pokrytonasinni. Chastyna 1 [Dendroflora of Ukraine. Wild and cultivated trees and shrubs. Angiosperms. Part I]. Kyiv: Phytosociocentre. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Koniakin, S., & Gubar, L. (2022). Spontaneous flora of the local landscape Feofaniya (Kyiv, Ukraine). Plant Introduction, 1(93/94), 46-61. doi:10.46341/pi2021020
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Kuzemko, A. A., Sydoruk, T. M., Didenko, I. P., Shvets, T. A., & Boyko, I. V. (2011). Spontaneous flora of the National Dendrological Park "Sofiyvka" of the NAS of Ukraine. Journal of Native and Alien Plant Studies, 7, 25-36. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Lukash, O. V. (2009). Flora sudynnykh roslyn Skhidnoho Polissia: struktura ta dynamika [Flora of vascular plants of Eastern Polissya: structure and dynamics]. Kyiv: Phytosociotsentr. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Marynych, O. M., Parkhomenko, H. O., Petrenko, O. M., & Shyshchenko, P. H. (2003). Improved scheme of the physical and geographical zoning of Ukraine. Ukrainian Geographical Journal, 1, 16-20. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Mosyakin, S. L., & Yavorska, O. G. (2002). The nonnative flora of the Kiev (Kyiv) urban area, Ukraine: a checklist and brief analysis. Urban Habitats, 1(1), 45-65.
Google Scholar

Mucina, L., Bültmann, H., Dierßen, K., Theurillat, J.-P., Raus, T., Čarni, A., ... & Tichý, L. (2016). Vegetation of Europe: hierarchical floristic classification system of vascular plant, bryophyte, lichen, and algal communities. Applied Vegetation Science, 19(S1), 3-264. doi:10.1111/avsc.12257
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Naegeli, O., & Thellung, A. (1905). Die Flora des Kantons Zürich. I Teil: Die Ruderal- und Adventivflora. Vierteljahrsschrift der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft Zürich, 50, 225-305.
Google Scholar

Nagodă, E., Comănescu, P., & Anastasiu, P. (2014). "Dimitrie Brandza" Botanic Garden, potential centre for the dispersal of invasive plants? Acta Horti Botanici Bucurestiensis, 41(1), 13-40. doi:10.2478/ahbb-2014-0002
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Protopopova, V. V. (1991). Sinantropnaya flora Ukraini i puti yee razvitiya [Synanthropic flora of Ukraine and ways of its development]. Kiev: Naukova Dumka. (In Russian)
Google Scholar

Protopopova, V. V., & Shevera, M. V. (2012). Phytoinvasions II. Analysis of the main classifications, schemes, and models. Industrial Botany, 12, 88-95. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

R Core Team (2024). R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. Retrieved from https://www.r-project.org

Rakhmetov, D. B., & Zaimenko, N. V. (2022). Stiikist introdukovanykh ta ridkisnykh roslyn za umov klimatychnykh zmin v Ukraini [Stability of introduced and rare plants under climatic changes in Ukraine]. Kyiv: Lira-K. (In Ukrainian)
Google Scholar

Raunkiaer, C. (1934). The life forms of plants and statistical plant geography; being the collected papers of C. Raunkiaer. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Google Scholar

Shynder, O. I., Kolomiychuk, V. P., & Melezhyk, O. V. (2022). Spontaneous flora of O. V. Fomin Botanical Garden of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine. Environmental & Socio-economic Studies, 10(1), 38-56. doi:10.2478/environ-2022-0004
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

von Raab-Straube, E., & Raus, T. (2024). Euro+Med-Checklist Notulae, 17. Willdenowia, 54(1), 5-45. doi:10.3372/wi.54.54101
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Wickham, H. (2016). Data Analysis. In: H. Wickham (Ed.), ggplot2 Elegant Graphics for Data Analysis (pp. 189-201). New York: Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-24277-4_9
CrossrefGoogle Scholar

Zhyhalenko, O. A., & Andriyenko, T. L. (2012). NPP Ichnianskyi [National Natural Park Ichnyansky]. In: V. A. Onyshchenko & T. L. Andriyenko (Eds.), Fitoriznomanittia zapovidnykiv i natsionalnykh pryrodnykh parkiv Ukrainy. Chastyna 2. Natsionalni pryrodni parky [Phytodiversity of nature reserves and national nature parks of Ukraine. Part 2: National Nature Parks] (pp. 257-265). Kyiv: Phytosociocentre. Retrieved from https://www.botany.kiev.ua/doc/zap_2.pdf (In Ukrainian)


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2026 Maryna Tarabun, Oleksandr Shynder, Vitaliy Kolomiychuk, Ihor Goncharenko

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.