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Ilda Vagge

Researcher at University of Milan

Publications -  43
Citations -  882

Ilda Vagge is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Germination & Vegetation (pathology). The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 39 publications receiving 691 citations.

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Allocating CSR plant functional types: the use of leaf economics and size traits to classify woody and herbaceous vascular plants

TL;DR: The method allowed classification of target species within a triangular space corresponding to Grime's theoretical CSR triangle and was sufficiently precise to distinguish strategies between species within genera and within populations of species.
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Plant communities of Italy: The Vegetation Prodrome

TL;DR: The Prodrome that is presented in this paper is the first full organic synthesis of the vegetation of Italy at the alliance syntaxonomic level and fulfils several needs, the main one being a unified and comprehensive national framework that may make an important contribution to the definition of the European Vegetationprodrome.
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Red Listing plants under full national responsibility: Extinction risk and threats in the vascular flora endemic to Italy

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive extinction assessment for endemic vascular plants under the full responsibility of a single country is presented, which would provide an important step towards the prioritization and conservation of threatened endemic flora at Italian, European, and Mediterranean level.
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New and validated syntaxa for the checklist of Italian vegetation

TL;DR: Ten new orders, 1 new suborder, 18 new alliances, 3 new suballiances and 5 new associations of different hierarchical levels are described here.
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Restoring population structure and dynamics in translocated species: learning from wild populations

TL;DR: The results suggest that population density is an important factor to account for in newly established populations, especially in those species showing density-dependent population dynamics, and the imitation of successful within-population dynamics occurring in natural stable populations may increase the translocation success.