Mediterranean Botany https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MBOT <p><em>Mediterranean Botany</em> (ISSNe 2603-9109) publishes original research in the field of Botany, including plant systematics, vegetation ecology, biogeography, evolutionary biology, ecophysiology, community ecology, ethnobotany and conservation biology from Mediterranean biomes and nearby regions. <em>Mediterranean Botany</em> is a DIAMOND OPEN ACCESS Journal, free of charge for both authors and readers.</p> en-US <p><em>Mediterranean Botany </em>is an open access journal to promote global exchange knowledge. It facilitates unrestricted access to its contents from the moment of publication in its electronic edition. The originals published are property of the Universidad Complutense and it is mandatory to cite such source in case of total or partial reproduction. All contents are distributed under a Creative Commons License 4.0 (CC BY 4.0). This circumstance must be expressly stated in this way when necessary. You can check the informative version and legal text of the license.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> mbot@ucm.es (Rosario G. Gavilán) prod.ediciones@ucm.es (Ediciones Complutense) Fri, 12 Dec 2025 07:51:00 +0000 OJS 3.3.0.8 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Sixty‐five years of change, from annuals to subshrubs: Diachronic vegetation dynamics in the halophytic–steppe ecotone of Chott Chergui, a Mediterranean semi-arid depression, Algeria https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MBOT/article/view/104346 <p>The current study presents a comprehensive 65-year diachronic analysis of the <em>Atriplex mauritanica-Suaeda fruticosa</em> subassociation in eastern Chott Chergui, Algeria. By resurveying historical plots from 1954 in 2019, the present study quantifies shifts in taxonomic composition, life‐form spectra, biogeographic affinities, and diversity metrics (Shannon-Wiener index, Pielou’s evenness, Margalef’s richness, Jaccard similarity, Cohen’s <em>d</em>). Species richness declined by 26.1 %, with therophytes decreasing from 68 % to 51 % and chamaephytes increasing from 19 % to 31 %. A significant decline in Shannon diversity (from 3.97 to 3.70, Welch’s <em>t </em>= 3.12, p&lt;0.001) and a Jaccard similarity of only 0.46 confirm substantial floristic turnover. Endemic taxa persisted (100 %), while mesic Mediterranean and pluri-regional elements contracted. The emergence of Saharo‐Sahelian <em>Atractylis serratuloides</em> highlights ongoing xerophytization under accelerating aridification. Conservation of this fragile ecosystem demands a combination of livestock exclusion and soil restoration, along with continuous climate monitoring. These efforts should be underpinned by multivariate and trait‐based analyses to pinpoint the drivers of change. Beyond documenting a hallmark of Mediterranean desertification, our study delivers a concise, transferable framework for long‐term vegetation‐change assessments in other climate‐sensitive steppes.</p> Mohamed Benkhettou, Ghania Benkhettou, Abdelkader Benkhettou, Khaled Taibi Copyright (c) 2025 Mediterranean Botany https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/MBOT/article/view/104346 Fri, 12 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000