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The study of vegetation-plot data on a broad geographical scale is of increasing importance in vegetation science. It significantly contributes to the transnational characterisation of vegetation types as well as the better understanding of their large-scale patterns and to habitat typologies, which are important for decision-making processes in European nature conservation.
I examined semi-natural, saline and brackish Baltic Sea grasslands which occur on sedimentary flats at the transition between land and sea. Their diverse vegetation is dependent on low intensity grazing (Dijkema 1990). This valuable part of the European cultural landscape (Küster 2004), which is recognized as Annex I priority habitat type (Natura 2000; European Commission 2013), underwent an overall decrease in quality and quantity within the last 150 years, which is frequently related to abandonment. Thus, the coastal grasslands of the Baltic Sea have been assessed as Endangered in the European Red List of Habitats (Janssen et al. 2016).
Within this thesis I (i) developed a proposal to integrate vegetation data using non-standard scales into general vegetation analyses, (ii) characterised the vegetation of Baltic Sea grasslands on transnational level, (iii) regarded them from a North-west European perspective, (iv) discussed their nature conservation aspects on European scale, (v) investigated changes in their plant species composition and discussed its possible relation to cessation of grazing and (vi) formulated a monitoring concept important for management planning in nature conservation.