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Vegetation structure in relation to micro‐landform in an evergreen broad‐leaved forest on Amami Ohshima Island, south‐west Japan
Author(s) -
Hara Masatoshi,
Hirata Kazuhiro,
Fujihara Michiro,
Oono Keiichi
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
ecological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.628
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1440-1703
pISSN - 0912-3814
DOI - 10.1007/bf02347790
Subject(s) - landform , ridge , evergreen , vegetation (pathology) , geology , erosion , habitat , physical geography , forestry , ecology , geography , geomorphology , biology , paleontology , medicine , pathology
The relationship between micro‐landform and vegetation structure was studied in a plot that was established on a slope from the ridge to the valley bottom in an evergreen broad‐leaved forest on Amami Ohshima Island, south‐west Japan. Five micro‐landform units recognized in the plot were grouped into the upper and lower slopes by their location in relation to the erosion front, and plant distributions and vegetation structure were compared between them. Although small trees with d.b.h. less than 10 cm occurred almost all over the plot, the occurrence of larger trees was limited mostly to the upper slope. Based on the spatial distribution pattern in the plot, woody species are classified into three groups: group A mostly or strictly confined to the upper slope; group B confined to the lower slope; and group C associated statistically with neither slope. A well‐developed forest stand, whose dominant species were Castanopsis sieboldii ssp. lutchuensis and Schima wallichii , was seen on the upper slope, whereas only a poorly developed stand was seen on the lower slope. The difference in stability of the land surface is likely to be the major cause of the observed differences in stand structure between the upper and lower slopes. It is suggested that the erosion front is important as a line demarcating different habitats within a slope from the ridge to the valley bottom.