ALPECOLE
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Alpine plant biodiversity

Human impact


 

In general, due to the relatively low human impact, the biodiversity of mountainous regions is less threatened than the species diversity of other regions. In Switzerland, for example, "only" 6.1% of the mountainous vascular plant species are estimated to be vulnerable or endangered, while in the Swiss midlands about 43% of the entire flora is considered to be vulnerable or even endangered (Landolt 1991). However, particular species are vulnerable due to their rareness, among them are especially the endemic species. Attractive species such as alpenrose (Rhododendron sp.), edelweiss (Leontopodium alpinum), or gentians (Gentiana sp.) used to be intensely collected by mountaineers. Today these species are protected by law. Furthermore, the intensification as well as the reduction of agriculture (reforestation), the construction of facilities for transport and tourism, and the generation of energy (reservoirs) may menace vascular plant diversity in the regions affected. It has been shown, for example, that spraying artificial snow in skiing areas represents a serious threat to the plant species diversity of low-nutrient and dry grasslands (Kammer 2002).

 

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29 August 2011
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