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Diversity, abundance, and structure of tree communities in the Uluguru forests in the Morogoro region, Tanzania 被引量:1
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作者 David Sylvester Kacholi Anthony Michael Whitbread Martin Worbes 《Journal of Forestry Research》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2015年第3期557-569,共13页
Uluguru forests are globally recognized as important biodiversity hotspots, but anthropogenic pressure threatens their value. This study examined species diver- sity, abundance, and structure of trees in the Uluguru f... Uluguru forests are globally recognized as important biodiversity hotspots, but anthropogenic pressure threatens their value. This study examined species diver- sity, abundance, and structure of trees in the Uluguru for- ests. All trees of diameter at breast height (DBH) 〉 10 cm were inventoried in seven forests ranging from 3 to 995 ha in area. A total of 900 stems, 101 species and 34 families were inventoried. Fabaceae was the most speciose family. Ehretia amoena Klotzsch was the most abundant species with relative abundance of 9.22 %. The forests differed significantly in species richness (26-93 species ha-l), tree density (85-390 stems ha-l), basal area (3-24 m2 ha-1) and Shannon-Wiener diversity (2.50--4.02). Forest area was significantly and positively correlated with species richness (r = 0.92) and species diversity (r = 0.95). Tree density showed significant positive correlation with speciesrichness (r = 0.80) and basal area (r = 0.85). Milawilila and Nemele forests had highest floristic similarity (0.55) followed by Kimboza and Kilengwe (0.54) while the rest had similarity coefficients of less than 0.50. Despite leg- islative protection, many forests remain at risk and there- fore the possibility to conserve highly valuable tree species via enhanced protection or cultivation must be considered. 展开更多
关键词 Eastern arc BIODIVERSITY DISTURBANCE HOTSPOTS Similarity
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