Desert vegetation and vegetation-environment relationships in Kirthar National Park, Sindh, Pakistan [An article from: Journal of Arid Environments]
Book Details
Author(s)N.J. Enright, B.P. Miller, R. Akhter
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR321A
ISBN-13978B000RR3218
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
Sales Rank99,999,999
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Arid Environments, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
A survey of the desert vegetation of Kirthar National Park, Pakistan, recorded 466 plant species in 372 sample quadrats. Classification (Twinspan) and ordination (NMDS) of dry season vegetation data (using 368 species) identified nine 'natural' and one 'cultural' vegetation assemblages: (1) Wetlands, (2) Riparian woodlands, (3) Sandy riparian woodlands, (4) Plains woodlands, (5) Stony shrublands, (6) Stony foothills woodlands, (7) Rocky riverbed shrublands, (8) Rocky slopes woodlands, (9) Cliffs, peaks and canyons vegetation, and (10) Irrigated fields. Major differences in species composition of vegetation existed between mountains, plains, wetlands and riparian vegetation. The vegetation of mountains, cliffs and canyons showed higher species richness and lower human impacts (from livestock grazing and wood harvesting) than did that of riparian and plains habitats. Physical environmental factors likely to affect water availability (e.g. slope angle, rockiness) were more important than soil chemical and human impact factors in determining the distribution of the major vegetation types and species richness patterns. Mountain-tops and canyons are reservoirs of high species richness and rare species, and may have acted as long-term refugia for species of more mesic environments. Plant species and community conservation priorities for the park are identified.
Description:
A survey of the desert vegetation of Kirthar National Park, Pakistan, recorded 466 plant species in 372 sample quadrats. Classification (Twinspan) and ordination (NMDS) of dry season vegetation data (using 368 species) identified nine 'natural' and one 'cultural' vegetation assemblages: (1) Wetlands, (2) Riparian woodlands, (3) Sandy riparian woodlands, (4) Plains woodlands, (5) Stony shrublands, (6) Stony foothills woodlands, (7) Rocky riverbed shrublands, (8) Rocky slopes woodlands, (9) Cliffs, peaks and canyons vegetation, and (10) Irrigated fields. Major differences in species composition of vegetation existed between mountains, plains, wetlands and riparian vegetation. The vegetation of mountains, cliffs and canyons showed higher species richness and lower human impacts (from livestock grazing and wood harvesting) than did that of riparian and plains habitats. Physical environmental factors likely to affect water availability (e.g. slope angle, rockiness) were more important than soil chemical and human impact factors in determining the distribution of the major vegetation types and species richness patterns. Mountain-tops and canyons are reservoirs of high species richness and rare species, and may have acted as long-term refugia for species of more mesic environments. Plant species and community conservation priorities for the park are identified.
