首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Woody plant diversity in relation to environmental factors in a seasonally dry tropical forest landscape
Authors:Handanakere S Dattaraja  Sandeep Pulla  Hebbalalu S Suresh  Mavinakoppa S Nagaraja  Chilakunda A Srinivasa Murthy  Raman Sukumar
Institution:1. Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India;2. Divecha Centre for Climate Change, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India;3. Department of Soil Science and Agriculture Chemistry, University of Horticultural Sciences, Bagalkot, India;4. Department of Soil Science and Agricultural Chemistry, University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru, India
Abstract:

Questions

Water availability is known to be a first‐order driver of plant diversity; yet water also affects fire regimes and soil fertility, which, in turn, affect plant diversity. We examined how precipitation, fire and soil properties jointly determine woody plant diversity. Specifically, we asked how woody plant diversity varies along a sharp precipitation gradient (about 600–1,800 mm mean annual precipitation MAP ]within a ~45‐km distance) exhibiting considerable variation in long‐term fire burn frequency and soil fertility, in a southern Indian seasonally dry tropical forest (SDTF ) landscape.

Location

Mudumalai, Western Ghats, India.

Methods

Woody plants ≥1‐cm DBH were enumerated in 19 1‐ha permanent plots spanning a range of tropical vegetation types from dry thorn forest, through dry and moist deciduous forest to semi‐evergreen forest. Burn frequencies were derived from annual fire maps. Six measures of surface soil properties – total exchangeable bases (Ca + Mg + K), organic carbon (OC ), total N, pH , plant available P and micronutrients (Fe + Cu + Zn + Mn) were used in the analyses. Five measures of diversity – species richness, Shannon diversity, the rarefied/extrapolated versions of these two measures, and Fisher's α – were modelled as functions of MAP , annual fire burn frequency and the principal components of soil properties.

Results

Most soil nutrients and OC increased with MAP , except in the wettest sites. Woody productivity increased with MAP , while fire frequency was highest at intermediate values of MAP . Woody plant diversity increased with MAP but decreased with increasing fire frequency, resulting in two local diversity maxima along the MAP gradient – in the semi‐evergreen and dry thorn forest – separated by a low‐diversity central region in dry deciduous forest where fire frequency was highest. Soil variables were, on the whole, less strongly correlated with diversity than MAP .

Conclusions

Although woody plant diversity in this landscape, representative of regional SDTF s, is primarily limited by water availability, our study emphasizes the role of fire as a potentially important second‐order driver that acts to reduce diversity in this landscape.
Keywords:Albrecht's curve  diversity–  disturbance relationships  fire  Mudumalai  plant diversity  precipitation  soil  Western Ghats
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号