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Gradient analysis and classification of the woody vegetation for four sites in southern Illinois and adjacent Missouri
Authors:Philip A Robertson  Mark D MacKenzie  Lee F Elliott
Institution:(1) Department of Botany, Southern Illinois University, 62901 Carbondale, IL, U.S.A.;(2) Department of Botany, University of Tennessee, 37916 Knoxville, TN, U.S.A.;(3) Southwestern Research Station, 85632 Portal, AZ, U.S.A.
Abstract:The woody vegetation and associated soil-site variables from a range of upland to swamp sites were measured using 480 0.04 ha plots from Little Black Slough, Goose Pond and Horseshoe Lake in Illinois, and Mingo Wildlife Refuge, Missouri. Multiple regression, correlation, and factor analysis were used to relate soil-site data to vegetation structure and composition. Coenoclines of both the understory and overstory were constructed to represent the upland-swamp vegetation gradient of the region near the northern terminus of the southern floodplain forest. Percent sand, depth of flooding, and silt content were variables most strongly related to the understory coenocline. Depth of flooding, and clay content were most strongly related to the overstory coenocline. Beta diversities of the understory and overstory coenoclines were 5.8 and 6.9HC. Understory density and overstory basal area increased and species richness and heterogeneity decreased along the upland-swamp gradient.Classification techniques identified three or four major overstory vegetation types within each study area. The 15 overstory types were ordinated and environmental characteristics summarized for each. Mingo Wildlife Refuge had the least flooding and lowest soil clay content. Classification of all 480 plots from the four study areas identified three major understory groups (mesic, floodplain and swamp) and eight overstory groups. These eight include aQuercus velutina-Q. alba, Quercus rubra-Q. alba, Liquidambar styraciflua-Ulmus americana, Quercus phellos-Q. palustris, Quercus lyrata-Acer rubrum, Acer rubrum-Nyssa aquatica, Nyssa aquatica-Taxodium distichum and aTaxodium distichum-Nyssa aquatica type arranged from upland to swamp.Botanical nomenclature follows Mohlenbrock (1975).Horseshoe Lake and Little Black Slough studies were supported, in part, by McIntire-Stennis Grants to PAR through the Department of Forestry, Southern Illinois University. The Department of Botany, Southern Illinois University provided support for the studies in Goose Pond, Illinois and Mingo Wildlife Refuge, Missouri. We thank Chris Baker and especially Claudia Mitchell for aid in data acquisition and analysis.
Keywords:Bottomland hardwoods  Classification  Diversity  Factor analysis  Floodplain  Gaussian analysis  Gradient analysis  Ordination  Soil-site variable  Swamp
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