Picea omorika (Pinaceae): an endangered endemic species from Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, locally naturalised in the Brembana Valley (Orobic Alps, Italy)


Autori
Giupponi L., Alberto A., Sala S., Giorgi A.
Anno
2026
Rivista
Italian Botanist
Numero
21
Abstract

Picea omorika is an endangered conifer endemic to Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. This research reports the first case of its naturalisation in Italy, specifically in a restricted area of the upper Brembana Valley (Orobic Alps, Lombardy), where an uneven-aged population, of approximately 50–60 individuals, grows within a wood pasture at 1,760–1,790 m a.s.l., inside the Orobie Bergamasche Regional Park. Dendrochronological analysis indicates that this population likely originated from a single tree planted for ornamental purposes near a mountain hut in the 1960s. Over the past 30 years, the species has propagated in the study area under cold, suboceanic climatic conditions and on moderately moist, nutrient-poor, slightly acidic soils, as inferred from climatic data and Ellenberg ecological indicator values. Grime’s competitor, stress tolerator, ruderal (CSR) functional strategy analysis classified P. omorika as a strictly stress-tolerant species (C = 0.0%, S = 100.0%, R = 0.0%) with low invasive potential. Phytosociological analysis indicates that the P. omorika community is part of a secondary succession that is progressing from pastures of Nardion strictae towards high-montane coniferous forests of Piceion excelsae. This research contributes to a better definition of the ecological niche of P. omorika.

Keywords
Alien species, CSR functional strategy, Ellenberg indicator values, naturalisation, serbian spruce, southern Alps
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