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Original Articles

Influence of bedrock-alluvial transition on plant species distribution along a Mediterranean river corridor

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Pages 564-575 | Received 16 Sep 2010, Accepted 02 Mar 2011, Published online: 16 Apr 2012
 

Abstract

The variation of riparian plant species composition along a river according to lithological features, forming more or less discrete plant assemblages, was tested using multivariate and univariate analyses. Moreover, Sørensen's index was applied to examine similarity between geological and floristic groups, and the Wilson–Shmida index to investigate species turnover. The analyses were based on field data recorded along a Mediterranean river (Rio Santa Lucia, Sardinia, Italy), where the morphology is influenced by the bedrock-alluvial transition. The results obtained from the various analytical techniques were in close agreement, and underlined that the lithological types exerted an important influence on the distribution and richness (peak in the medium and the upper river part) of riparian plants, but also in their life forms (woody species and hemicryptophytes). The distribution patterns of species along the river suggested that primary drivers in the organization of the riparian plant communities were lithological types, geomorphology and altitude. Moreover, the bedrock-alluvial transition marked the highest species turnover, linked also to a different degree of human disturbance. The results of the present study indicate that the bedrock/alluvial influence is an integral component of the patch structure, which strongly influences riparian plant distribution patterns in a Mediterranean environment.

Acknowledgments

We are particularly grateful to T. Carai, P. Casula, D. Fanti, M. Orr[ugrave], L. Podda and C. Pontecorvo for their help in field work, and to F. Mascia for precious help in plant determination. We also thank the anonymous referee for useful comments that improved the manuscript.

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