Vegetation-environment relationships on a species-rich coastal mountain range in the fynbos biome (South Africa)

被引:63
作者
McDonald, DJ
Cowling, RM
Boucher, C
机构
[1] UNIV CAPE TOWN, DEPT BOT, RONDEBOSCH 7700, SOUTH AFRICA
[2] UNIV STELLENBOSCH, DEPT BOT, STELLENBOSCH 7600, SOUTH AFRICA
来源
VEGETATIO | 1996年 / 123卷 / 02期
关键词
classification; fynbos; gradient analysis; vegetation-environment relationships;
D O I
10.1007/BF00118269
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The species-rich fynbos of the southern Langeberg Mountains, South Africa was studied along three transects (a) to evaluate the compatibility of a floristic classification of the southern Langeberg vegetation with a fynbos biome-wide structural classification of mountain vegetation, (b) to describe the environmental gradients to which the vegetation responds and (c) to investigate the relationship between the vegetation and the abiotic environmental variables which determine the pattern of distribution of the fynbos communities on the southern Langeberg. Principal Components Analysis (PCA) was used to determine correlations between environmental variables independent of vegetation data. Similarities between the 46 communities (determined by floristics) from the three transects were determined using cluster analysis and grouped into 14 higher-level units. Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA) was then used for indirect gradient analysis after which Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) was used in a direct gradient analysis of the vegetation with the environmental variables. Compatibility between the floristic and structural classification of the vegetation was analysed. The PCA principal gradient was defined as one from sites with high rock cover, shallow soils and north aspects to those with low rock cover, deeper soils and south aspects. The second gradient is most strongly positively correlated with percentage organic carbon and most strongly negatively correlated with soil clay content. In contrast to the PCA, the DCA showed that the principal gradient is a precipitation gradient, with the response of the vegetation dominated by the change from wet to dry conditions and from low to high winter incoming radiation. The CCA showed that the variation in the mountain habitats to which the vegetation responds can be predicted from a combination of a few environmental variables. The principal gradient was one of change from high to low mean annual precipitation with an opposite change in winter incoming radiation. The second gradient was described by percentage surface rock cover and soil clay content. A simple model using the environmental factors selected in the CCA was proposed for predicting the distribution of floristically determined community groups in the fynbos vegetation of the Langeberg and the southern Cape coastal mountains in general.
引用
收藏
页码:165 / 182
页数:18
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