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Effects of Canopy Gaps, Topography, and Soils on the Distribution of Woody Species in a Central Brazilian Deciduous Dry Forest 1
Author(s) -
OliveiraFilho Ary T.,
Curi Nilton,
Vilela Enivanis A.,
Carvalho Douglas A.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
biotropica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.813
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1744-7429
pISSN - 0006-3606
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7429.1998.tb00071.x
Subject(s) - deciduous , detrended correspondence analysis , canopy , soil water , quadrat , environmental science , relative species abundance , abundance (ecology) , ecology , hydrology (agriculture) , geology , soil science , biology , ordination , shrub , geotechnical engineering
The interrelationships between the distribution of woody species and environmental variables were investigated in an area of deciduous dry forest in Santa Vitöria, central Brazil. This is the first study of a vanishing type of dry forest which grows on base‐rich soils originating from the basalt bedrocks of southern Goiás and western Minas Gerais. A survey of topography, soil properties, canopy gaps and woody plants (≥5 cm diameter at the base of the stem) was conducted in 50–15 × 15 m quadrats. The soils were classified into the following soil series: Hapludolls → Haplustolls → Haplustolls → Ustropepts → Rhodustalfs. This series corresponded to a gradient of increasing elevation and effective soil depth and decreasing slope gradient, soil organic matter and total exchangeable bases. A canonical correspondence analysis and a detrended correspondence analysis indicated that plant species’abundance distribution was significantly correlated with both the relative area of canopy gaps in the quadrats and the soil‐topography gradient. Presumably, the critical factors involved in these two gradients are, respectively, light and ground water regimes. The influence of canopy gaps ( i.e. , light) was surprising and has not been documented previously for tropical deciduous dry forests.