Ostrya Carpinifolia - Version 2014.3. Shaw, K., Roy, S., & Wilson, B. In The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, pages 194280/0+. 2014.
abstract   bibtex   
[Excerpt] This species has a wide distribution. Although subpopulations at the edges of its distribution are reported to be threatened, there are no range wide threats impacting on this species. It is therefore assessed as Least Concern. [::Common Name(s)] [::]English - European Hop-hornbeam, Hop Hornbeam [::Range Description] This species is distributed in south-central and southern Europe, Caucasus, Turkey, Syria and Lebanon. [::Countries] Native:Albania; Austria; Azerbaijan; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; France (Corsica, France (mainland)); Georgia; Greece; Italy (Italy (mainland), Sardegna, Sicilia); Lebanon; Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of; Montenegro; Russian Federation (Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetiya, Kabardino-Balkariya, Karachaevo-Cherkessiya, Krasnodar, Severo-Osetiya, Stavropol); Serbia (Serbia); Slovenia; Switzerland; Syrian Arab Republic; Turkey (Turkey-in-Asia, Turkey-in-Europe) Possibly extinct:Hungary [::Population] This species is listed as Extinct in Hungary in the Red List of the vascular flora of Hungary and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. It is listed as declining in Red Data Book of the Russian Federation and Endangered in Georgia (Red List of Georgia 2006). However, it has a wide distribution outside of these areas where subpopulations are stable. [::Habitat and Ecology] This species occurs as a tree to 24 m tall. It is found on shrubby, strong, sunny hillsides, crags, on south-facing slopes in the Downy Oakwood zone and eastern Mediterranean regions. It is an important constituent of deciduous forest and scrub, open coniferous woodland on dry rocky slopes, often on limestone.~In Turkey the species is found in deciduous forests or scrub, in open Pinus brutia and P. nigra forest, very often on dry stony hillsides (limestone). [::Use and Trade] There is no use or trade information available for this species. [::Major Threat(s)] There are no major threats identified for this species.
@incollection{shawOstryaCarpinifoliaVersion2014,
  title = {Ostrya Carpinifolia - {{Version}} 2014.3},
  booktitle = {The {{IUCN Red List}} of {{Threatened Species}}},
  author = {Shaw, K. and Roy, S. and Wilson, B.},
  year = {2014},
  pages = {194280/0+},
  abstract = {[Excerpt] This species has a wide distribution. Although subpopulations at the edges of its distribution are reported to be threatened, there are no range wide threats impacting on this species. It is therefore assessed as Least Concern. [::Common Name(s)] [::]English - European Hop-hornbeam, Hop Hornbeam [::Range Description] This species is distributed in south-central and southern Europe, Caucasus, Turkey, Syria and Lebanon. [::Countries] Native:Albania; Austria; Azerbaijan; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; France (Corsica, France (mainland)); Georgia; Greece; Italy (Italy (mainland), Sardegna, Sicilia); Lebanon; Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of; Montenegro; Russian Federation (Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetiya, Kabardino-Balkariya, Karachaevo-Cherkessiya, Krasnodar, Severo-Osetiya, Stavropol); Serbia (Serbia); Slovenia; Switzerland; Syrian Arab Republic; Turkey (Turkey-in-Asia, Turkey-in-Europe) Possibly extinct:Hungary [::Population] This species is listed as Extinct in Hungary in the Red List of the vascular flora of Hungary and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. It is listed as declining in Red Data Book of the Russian Federation and Endangered in Georgia (Red List of Georgia 2006). However, it has a wide distribution outside of these areas where subpopulations are stable. [::Habitat and Ecology] This species occurs as a tree to 24 m tall. It is found on shrubby, strong, sunny hillsides, crags, on south-facing slopes in the Downy Oakwood zone and eastern Mediterranean regions. It is an important constituent of deciduous forest and scrub, open coniferous woodland on dry rocky slopes, often on limestone.~In Turkey the species is found in deciduous forests or scrub, in open Pinus brutia and P. nigra forest, very often on dry stony hillsides (limestone). [::Use and Trade] There is no use or trade information available for this species. [::Major Threat(s)] There are no major threats identified for this species.},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-13621305,conservation,forest-resources,iucn,iucn-least-concern-lc,ostrya-carpinifolia},
  lccn = {INRMM-MiD:c-13621305}
}

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