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Sources of Records for Albania in Flora Europaea PDF

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Sources of records for Albania in Flora Europaea compiled by Peter W. Ball CONTENTS 1. Introduction - page 2 2. Flora Europaea vol. 1 - page 6 3. Flora Europaea vol. 2 - page 21 4. Flora Europaea vols 3 and 4 - page 40 5. Flora Europaea vol. 5 - page 65 6. Plant collections from Northern Albania by Bruno Schütt - page 78 Part 1: Introduction The following lists of the flora of Albania were compiled in the period 1961-1968. During the early stages in the preparation of manuscripts for Flora Europaea volume 1 it became apparent that there was no reliable source of information for geographical data for countries in the Balkan peninsula except for Bulgaria. The main Flora covering the region was Hayek (1924-1931), but Hayek gives distributions based on areas defined by a combination of phytogeographical considerations and pre-1914 political boundaries. While most of these areas are wholly within the post 1945 political boundaries some, particularly Albania, Epirus, Macedonia and Thrace transcend post 1945 political boundaries and so do not present reliable evidence for the occurrence of a species within the political areas recognized in Flora Europaea (Webb 1963). This created difficulties for two countries, Turkey and Albania. D. A. Webb compiled a list for Turkey-in-Europe (which was part of Hayek’s Thrace), and this was published by Webb (1966). I took on the task of compiling a list for Albania (see Webb, 1963). Although Hayek recognized an area he called Albania this area differed significantly from the post 1919 boundaries of Albania. Hayek’s Albania extended the north-eastern boundary considerably further east than the post-1919 political boundary, including all of the mountain range often referred to as “Northern Albanian Alps”. Much of this mountain range is in Serbia and Macedonia (particularly the part named !ar Planina) and at the time Hayek was published this portion of the range was much more extensively explored than the part which remained in Albania. At the southern boundary Hayek drew the boundary slightly further north than the post 1919 boundary, including this part of Albania in Epirus, which is primarily part of post 1919 Greece. Following the end of the first world war several collecting expeditions were sent to Albania resulting in many additions to the flora which were only partially included in Hayek. A further source of confusion arises from many pre-1914 collections in which the labels state that the collection was from Albania when in fact it came from Serbia or Macedonia. Some of these collections are from areas which are now along political boundaries (especially high mountain peaks such as Korab, Koritnik and Pastrik) so introducing an element of uncertainty about which country they came from. During the post-1920 period these high mountain border peaks were often out-of-bounds for plant collectors so it was not possible to verify these older reports of the occurrence of a species in Albania. The list was compiled from published papers, mostly derived from the extensive bibliography published by Markgraf (1932) together with a supplement Markgraf (1963). Some post-1945 collections and publications could not be included as they were not available to me at the time. However some did become available after the publication of volumes 1 and 2 of Flora Europaea so the list for volumes 3 and 4 is more complete than those for the earlier volumes. The bibliography indicates (*) those publications which became available at a later time. For a variety of reasons the list was never completed for volume 5 of Flora Europaea. The information that had been accumulated by 1968 is included here, but it does not coincide with the records published in Flora Europaea volume 5. There are about 50 species included in Flora Europaea volume 5 which are not in that list. It is likely that these were derived from Flora of Tirana (Tir) and from other sources that became available after 1970. However the list includes about 90 species 2 reported from Albania but which are not reported for Albania in Flora Europaea. Some of these appear to be the only report of the species from Albania. In addition to published records I was given access to unpublished material. The most important of these was a manuscript by Bruno Schütt which was made available by the Curator of Botany of the Uebersee Museum, Bremen (BREM). This manuscript is included as part 6 of this document. Another important addition was a complete list of the collections made by Alston and Sandwith kindly provided by N. Sandwith. Although Alston & Sandwith published a proportion of their records this list contained a number of records which appear to be the only reports of a species from Albania. I was also given access to complete lists of collections made in Albania during the 1930’s by several different people and housed at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. A few reports of these collections were published by Turrill (1932, 1939) and Chator & Turrill (1934) but most are unpublished. It is important to understand that this list does not purport to represent a comprehensive list of the flora of Albania. Its main purpose was to ensure that species reported from Albania in Flora Europaea were based on evidence which could be verified either in print or by an author examining herbarium specimens. Unfortunately some important collections of Albanian plants were destroyed during the second World War and later, particularly those of Markgraf at B. Some material at W was also lost in 1945, and much material at Budapest (BP) was lost in 1956. The list is arranged in the sequence published by Hayek (1924-1932), the species being numbered according to Hayek. Because Flora Europaea followed a slightly different family sequence from Hayek a few families are out of sequence when they occur in a different volume of Flora Europaea. For example volume 1 of Hayek is covered by volumes 1 and 2 of Flora Europaea and volume 2 of Hayek is covered by volumes 3 and 4 of Flora Europaea. Within a family the genera and species are arranged in the Hayek sequence, new genera being placed at the end of the family and new species at the end of the genus. Species or infra specific taxa included in the list without a reference are reported from a minimum of 3 sources by at least two independent authors. Species reported from one or two sources, or reported by only one author, include appropriate references. It is important to note that one source may report a species from several localities and in a few cases a species reported by several different authors may be restricted to a single locality. Post-1919 collections are assumed to be in present-day Albania although some are from border mountains. Pre-1919 collections were traced to present-day Albania as far as it was possible to do so. Where there was a considerable element of doubt about the locality, records were not included. Baldacci (1899), and Baldacci (1901) are particularly difficult as Baldacci (1899) collected in areas that are now mainly in Greece and Baldacci (1901) crossed into Montenegro although most of these collections appear to be from Albania. Many of the D"rfler and other collections reported by Hayek (1917) and Hayek (1924) are from boundary areas so some care has to be exercised with these records and in a few cases it is not possible to be sure which country a collection came from. Such records are indicated as boundary or border records, especially when they are the only available record for a species, although many of these were verified by the unpublished records of Schütt. Below is a key to the abbreviations used in the list for sources of records together with references to those publications also mentioned above. Extensive bibliographies for 3 Albania were published by Markgraf (1932, 1963) and these should be consulted for older sources of information. List of abbreviations and bibliography. A&S Alston, A.G. H. & N.Y. Sandwith, 1940. Results of two Botanical Expeditions to South Albania. Jour. Bot. (London) 78. Unpublished list by N. Y. Sandwith. B94 Baldacci, A., Rivista critica della collezione botanica fatta nel 1892 in Albania. Malpighia 8. B 94b Baldacci, A., 1894. Contributo alla conscenza della Flora dalmata, montenegrina, albanese, epirota e greca. N. Gior. Bot. Ital. 1. B96. Baldacci, A., 1896. Rivista della collezione botanica fatta nel 1894 in Albania. Bull. Herb. Boiss. 4. B99 Baldacci, A., 1899. Rivista dalla collezione botanica fatta nel 1896 in Albania. N. Giorn. Bot. Ital. 6. B01 Baldacci, A., 1901. Rivista della collezione botanica fatta nel 1897 nell’Albania settentrionale. Mem. Acad. Sci. Ist. Bologna, ser. 9, 5. B17 Baldacci, A., 1917. Itinerari albanasi. Rome. BB Baldacci, A. & Beguinot, 1918. Contributo alla flora autumnale et invernale del dintorni di Vallona. N. Giorn. Bot. Ital. 25. Bm33 Bornmüller, J., 1933. Zur Flora von Montenegro, Albanien und Macedonien. Magyar Bot. Lapok 32. Chator, D. A., & W. B. Turrill, A Contribution to the Flora of Central Albania. Kew Bull. 1934. Form. Formanek, E., 1895. Beiträg zur Flora von Albanien, Korfu und Epirus. Verh. Natf. Vereins Brünn. 33 See Vandas, 1909. Gr Grimus, V. von, 1871. Beiträge zur Flora Albaniens. Verh. Zool.-Bot. Ges. Wien 21. Giu Giusseppi. Specimens at Kew. See Chator & Turrill and Turrill. H17 Hayek A. von, 1917. Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Flora des albanisch- montenegrinischen Grenzgebietes. Denschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien, Math.- natw. Kl. 94 H24 Hayek, A. von, 1924. Zweiter Beiträg zur Kenntnis der Flora Albanien. Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien, Math.-natw. Kl. 99. Hayek, A. von, Prodromus Florae Peninsulae Balcanicae. Vol. 1, 1924, Vol. 2, 1927, Vol. 3, 1932 (completed by F. Markgraf). Held. Heldreich, von, 1879. Ein Beitrag zur Flora von Epirus, geliefert von Herrn N. K. Chodzes. Verh. Bot. Vereins Prov. Brandenburg 21. Sitzber. Hep Hepburn, I. Specimens at K. Some published by Turrill and Chator & Turrill J20 Janchen, E., Vorarbeiten zu einer Flora der Umgebung von !kodra in Nord- Albanien. Österr. Bot. Zeitschr. 69. 4 Jav. Csiki, E., A. Jávorka & E. B. Kümmerle, 1926. Additamenta ad Floram Albaniae. Pteridophyta by E. Kümmerle, Anthophyta by A. Jávorka. Budapest. M27 Markgraf, F., 1927. An den Grenzen des Mittelmeergebiets: Pflanzengeographie von Mittelalbanien. Feddes Repert. Beih. 45. M32 Markgraf, F., 1932. Pflanzengeographie von Albanien. Bibliotheca Botanica 105. M42* Markgraf, F., 1942. Reisebericht aus Albanien. Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Mus. Berlin-Dahlem. 15. Markgraf, F., 1963. Bericht Albanien 1961. Webbia 18. K48 Kitanov, B., 1948. Contribution á l’étude de la Flora d’Albanie de l’Est. Ann. Fac. Phil. Univ. Skopje Sect. Sci. Nat. 1. Pamp. Pampanini, R., 1915. Contributo alla conoscenza della Flora d’Albania. Bull. Soc. Bot. Ital. 84. Penn. Pennington. Specimens at Kew. See Chator & Turrill and Turrill. R. Rechinger fil., K. H., 1939. Zur Flora von Albanien und Mazedonien. Feddes Repert. Sp. Nov. 47. Rohl Rohlena, J., 1937. Beitrag zur Flora Albaniens. V#stník Kralovské $eské Akad. Spolo%nosti Nauk Trída Matemat. P&irod. 1937. Rod Rodriguez, 1923. Plantes de l’Albanie Moyenne. Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris Sch Schütt, B. Unpublished list. See part 6 below. Tir* Paparisto, K., Xh. Qosja & M. Demiri, 1962. Flora e Tiranes. Tirana. Turrill, W. B., 1932. A Contribution to the Flora of Central Albania. Kew Bull. 1932. Turrill, W. B., 1939. Two new Species and New or Important Records. Kew Bull. 1939. Vandas, K., 1909. Reliquiae Formanekianae. Brunae (Brno). Webb, D. A., 1963. The need for check-lists of the flora of certain European territories. Webbia 18. Webb, D. A., 1966. The Flora of European Turkey. Proc. Roy. Irish Acad. 65B. Weiss* Weiss, E., 1866. Floristisches aus Istrien, Dalmatien und Albanien. Verh. Zool.-Bot. Ges. Wien. 16 5 Part 2: Flora Europaea vol. 1 Pteridophyta 1. Lycopodium selago K48 6. Selaginella selaginoides K48 7. S. helvetica M27 9. Equisetum maximum 10. E. arvense 12. E. palustre 13. E. limosum H24 14. E. ramosissimum 15. E. hiemale 22. Ophioglossum vulgatum M27 M32 24. Botrychium lunaria 26. B. matricariaefolium H24 28. Osmunda regalis M32 Bm33 29. Polypodium vulgare 33. Pteridium aquilinum 34. Adiantum capillus-veneris 35. Notholaena marantae 38. Cheilanthes persica 39. Cryptogramma crispa K48 42. Phyllitis scolopendrium M27 M32 46. Asplenium viride 48. A. trichomanes A. var. trichomanes B. var. csikii Jav 53. A. adiantum-nigrum I. subsp. adiantum-nigrum II. sibsp. serpentini III. subsp. onopteris 54. A. fissum 55. A. ruta-muraria 56. A. lepidum Jav 57. A. septentrionale 55 x 56. A. x javorkae Jav 58. Ceterarch officinarum 59. Athyrium filix-foemina 61. Dryopteris linnaeana A&S H17(border) 62. D. robertiana B01 Sch 66. D. filix-mas 67. D. villarsii I. subsp. rigida II. subsp. pallidaI 68. D. spinulosa K48 69. Polystichum lonchitis 69 x 70. P. x illyricum 70. P. lobatum 6 71. P. setigerum 74. Cystopteris fragilis 75. C. regia 79. Marsilea quadrifolia Sch Gymnospermae 81. Taxus baccata 83. Juniperus communis I. subsp. communis II. subsp. nana 84. J. oxycedrus 85. J. macrocarpa B96 86. J. foetidissima 89. J. phoenicea Sch Gr? 90. Cupressus sempervirens BB 91. Abies alba A. borisii-regis A&S 94. Picea excelsa Jav Sch 97. Pinus halepensis B96 M32 100. P. mughus 101. P. heldreichii M32 Bm33 102 I. P. nigra 104. P. pinea M32 105. P. peuce 106. Ephedra campylopoda 107. E. distachya Betulaceae 109. Betula pendula H24(boundary) 112. Alnus incana 113. A. glutinosa 114. Carpinus betulus 115. C. orientalis 116. Ostrya carpinifolia 117. Corylus colurna A&S 118. C. avellana Fagaceae 120. Fagus silvatica 122. Castanea sativa 123. Quercus cerris (vars. cerris, austriaca, pseudocerris) 124. Q. macedonica 125. Q. aegilops B94 B94b 126. Q. pseudosuber M27 127. Q. coccifera 7 128. Q. ilex 130. Q. conferta 131 II. Q. lanuginose 136. Q. sessiliflora 137. Q. robur B94 M32 123 x 124 R 130 x 136 Jav Juglandaceae 139. Juglans regia Salicaceae 140. Populus alba 142. P. tremula 143. P. italica 144. Salix amygdaloides Sch 145. S. pentandra Bm33 147. S. alba 154. S. arbuscula Jav Sch 155. S. hastata Jav 159. S. elaeagnos 162. S. purpurea I. subsp. purpurea A&S II. subsp. amplexicaulis Jav M27 163 I. S. retusa 165. S. reticulata Moraceae 166. Morus alba J20 Sch (?cult) 167. M. nigra Sch (?cult) 168. Ficus carica 169. Humulus lupulus J20 Sch Ulmaceae 171. Ulmus campestris (incl. U. glabra, U. foliacea) 173. U. scabra B01 174. U. laevis H24 176. Celtis australis Urticaceae 179. Urtica dioica 180. U. membranacea BB H24 181. U. urens 8 182. U. pilulifera J20 Sch 184. Parietaria erecta 185. P. ramiflora Santalaceae 189. Osiris alba 191. Thesium alpinum B01 K48 194. T. linophyllum M27 H24 (boundary) 195. T. divaricatum 196. T. ramosum A&S Jav 198. T. parnassi 200. T. auriculatum Jav Sch 203. T. bergeri B99 Loranthaceae 206. Loranthus europaeus 207. Arceuthobium oxycedri 209. Viscum laxus Chenopodiaceae 353. Polycnemum majus B94 J20 356 I. Beta maritime 359. Chenopodium botrys 362. C. vulvaria Jav 363. C. hybridum Jav 365. C. opulifolium 366 I. C. album 368. C. urbicum B96 370. C. glaucum B94b A&S 371. C. bonus-henricus 372. C. foliosum Hep 375. Atriplex hortensis J20 380. A. hastata M27 A&S 381. A. rosea B94 382. A. tartarica B96 384. A. portulacoides 388. Camphorosma monspeliaca B17(1894) 391. Kochia prostrata A&S (sub K. scoparia) 393. K. scoparia H24 401. Halocnemum strobilaceum A&S B96 402. Arthrocnemum glaucum 403. Salicornia fruticosa (incl. f.radicans) 404. S. herbacea 9 406. Suaeda fruticosa B96 408. S. maritima 409. S. splendens 413. Salsola kali A. var. kali B17(1894) A&S B. var. tragus B17(1894) 414. S. soda B94b A&S 417. Petrosimonia crassifolia Caryophyllaceae 442. Herniaria hirsute 443. H. incana 445. H. parnassica 446. H. glabra 448. Paronychia chionaea 449. P. kapela 450. P. cephalotes Penn Sch 457. Polycarpon tetraphyllum J20 Sch 460. Spergularia salina M27 Sch 462. S. rubra 463. S. diandra B96 467. Scleranthus perennis Sch Jav 468. S. neglectus 470. S. uncinatus B01 H17 472.S. annuus I. subsp. annuus II. subsp. verticillatus B01 J20 473. Queria hispanica A&S 479. Minuartia bosniaca Sch 480. M. setacea Hep 485. M. velenovskyi H17 486. M. tenuifolia H17 488. M. mediterranea 492. M. verna I. subsp. montana II. subsp. leptophylla A&S Jav IV. subsp. gerardi 496. M. recurva I. subsp. juressi M27 M32 II. subsp. recurva 498 I. M. graminifolia subsp. clandestina 499 I. M. stellata A&S 503. M. baldaccii subsp. I, II, III. 504 (1st) M. garckeana M27 513. Arenaria cretica B94 B96 (A. gracilis sensu Baldacci) 516. A. rotundifolia var. pauciflora B94 B96 var. pancicii B01 Jav 517. A. biflora 518. A. serpyllifolia 519. A. leptoclados 522. A. conferta *A. serpentinii A&S 525. Moehringia trinervia 530. M. malyi Jav 532. M. ciliata Jav Sch 10

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first world war several collecting expeditions were sent to Albania resulting in many additions to the flora which were only partially included in Hayek. A further source of confusion arises from many pre-1914 collections in which the labels state that the collection was from Albania when in fact i
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