Megjelent 2 új cikkünk  
Megjelent B-Béres Viktória elsőszerzőségével legújabb cikkünk az 
Ecological Indicators szakfolyóiratban (B-Béres,
 V., Lukács, Á., Török, P., Kókai, Zs., Novák, Z., T-Krasznai, E., 
Tóthmérész, B. I. Bácsi (2016): Combined eco-morphological functional 
groups are reliable indicators of colonisation processes of benthic 
diatom assemblages in a lowland stream. Ecological Indicators 64: 31-38.). A cikkben elsőként teszünk 
javaslatot kombinált ökológiai csoportok alkalmazására a kovaalga 
közösségek fajdinamikai folyamatainak értelmezésében. A cikk  elkérhető a szerzőktől. A cikk összefoglalója az alábbiakban olvasható.
Megjelent B-Béres Viktória elsőszerzőségével legújabb cikkünk az 
Ecological Indicators szakfolyóiratban (B-Béres,
 V., Lukács, Á., Török, P., Kókai, Zs., Novák, Z., T-Krasznai, E., 
Tóthmérész, B. I. Bácsi (2016): Combined eco-morphological functional 
groups are reliable indicators of colonisation processes of benthic 
diatom assemblages in a lowland stream. Ecological Indicators 64: 31-38.). A cikkben elsőként teszünk 
javaslatot kombinált ökológiai csoportok alkalmazására a kovaalga 
közösségek fajdinamikai folyamatainak értelmezésében. A cikk  elkérhető a szerzőktől. A cikk összefoglalója az alábbiakban olvasható.
Abstract:
Classifying
 benthic diatom taxa based on ecological and morphological features 
became increasingly important in recent years due to the demand of 
understanding the dynamics and functioning of diatom assemblages. The 
great potential in using these functional classifications in diatom 
ecology involves further refinement of current classification. In our 
experimental study, colonisation processes of diatom assemblages were 
studied in a typical small lowland stream, using both diatom guilds and 
cell size categories. We also tested newly proposed combined 
eco-morphological functional groups (ecological guilds combined with 
cell size categories) in the study of the colonisation process in 
benthic diatom assemblages. We hypothesised that (i) there is a decrease
 in the proportion of low profile guild, while an increase in that of 
high profile and motile guilds in time with the decreasing rate of 
physical disturbance; (ii) the presence of small size categories will be
 pronounced at the beginning of the colonisation processes, while 
proportion of larger size categories will be higher in the latter phases
 of colonisation; and (iii) the relationship between taxa and 
environmental factors are better reflected by the use of combined 
eco-morphological functional groups than by the sole analyses of rough 
guilds or cell size categories. The first hypothesis was not confirmed, 
and our second hypothesis was only partially confirmed by the results. 
We found that the relationship between environmental factors and guilds,
 as well as cell size categories was not appropriate to reveal the 
relationship between abiotic factors and taxa composition. In contrast 
we found that compositional changes in colonisation were appropriately 
reflected by the newly defined combined eco-morphological functional 
groups. In the combined eco-morphological functional groups, such kind 
of taxonomical and ecological features can be prevailed which are hidden
 in guilds or cell size categories separately. Thus these combined 
eco-morphological functional groups could help to come one step closer 
to develop a widely used ecological classification in diatom researches.
Keywords: Eco-morphological functional groups; Diatom guilds; Cell size categories; Colonisation; Lowland stream
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A másik cikk Török Péter elsőszerzőségével jelent meg  a szakma egyik rangos nemzetközi lapjánál a Functional Ecology-nál (Török P., T-Krasznai E., B-Béres 
V., Bácsi I., Borics G., Tóthmérész B.  (2016): Functional diversity 
supports the biomass-diversity humped-back relationship in phytoplankton
 assemblages. ). A cikk összefoglalója az alábbiakban olvasható. A cikk  elkérhető a szerzőktől.Abstract:
1.
 Modelling the relationship between biomass and diversity in 
phytoplankton assemblages provides new insights into the mechanisms 
responsible for the coexistence of species, even in terrestrial 
ecosystems.
2.
 We tested the biomass-diversity relationship in lake phytoplankton 
along a wide biomass gradient using functional species groups. We 
hypothesized that changes in the taxonomic diversity of the 
phytoplankton along a biomass gradient are associated with altered 
functional diversity.
3.
 For the analyses, in total 768 samples were collected from 30 oxbows, 
reservoirs and lakes in the Hungarian Lowland Region and analysed 
between 1992 and 2002.
4.
 We found that the diversity and also the number of functional species 
groups showed a humped-back curve similar to the species richness. The 
changes in functional group composition act as a good proxy for 
phytoplankton species responses. We found that the peak of the number of
 strategy groups and their Shannon diversity was at a much lower biomass
 than that of species richness.
5.
 We revealed the fine-scale effects of increasing the dominance of 
respective species or species groups with increasing biomass. This 
increase was well reflected by the changes in the functional 
characteristics: first, the species evenness; then, the Shannon 
diversity; and finally, the species richness started to decrease with 
increasing biomass.
6.
 Cyanoprokaryota were positively correlated with increasing biomass and 
negatively with the increase in species richness; thus, the high 
increase both in their abundance and biomass can be responsible for the 
abruptly decreasing part of the humped-back curve.
7.
 We detected a humped-back curve between biomass and diversity, where 
the peak compared to terrestrial plant communities tended to be towards 
high biomass scores, that is, greater than 60% instead of the 20 to 60% 
of the biomass range typical for terrestrial plant communities. Marked 
differences in the structural and dynamic features of phytoplankton 
assemblages and terrestrial plant communities are likely responsible for
 this difference.
Keywords: algae, ecological strategy, functional redundancy, functional strategies, humpback model, species richness, unimodal curve