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Patterns of Plant Species Richness Along Riverbanks
Author(s) -
Nilsson Christer,
Grelsson Gunnel,
Johansson Mats,
Sperens Ulf
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.2307/1938414
Subject(s) - ruderal species , species richness , ecology , substrate (aquarium) , vegetation (pathology) , biology , geography , habitat , medicine , pathology
We studied bank vegetation between the spring high—water level and the summer low—water level along two rivers in northern Sweden. The hypothesis that natural and ruderal species would show different downstream patterns of species richness was tested by sampling species composition and environmental variables along 200 m long stretches of riverbank 10 km apart. Natural species richness was highest in the midreaches of both rivers, whereas ruderal species showed a significant, monotonic increase downstream. There are no obvious mechanisms producing the quadratic pattern of natural species richness. The downstream increase in ruderal species suggests a founder effect depending on larger artificial disturbances near the coast, but alternative explanations are also given. Total species richness did not exhibit any interpretable downstream patterns. The only factors significantly correlated with total species richness along both rivers were substrate heterogeneity and substrate fineness. Total species richness increased with substrate heterogeneity and was at maximum at intermediate levels of substrate fineness. This suggests that co—occurrence of natural and ruderal species is most likely where substrate types are numerous and dominant substrate particle size intermediate.

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