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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5052
    Keywords: Africa ; Grassland ; Miombo woodland ; Plant communities ; Rhodesia ; Serpentine ; Syntaxonomy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In the northern part of the Great Dyke, Rhodesia, the physiognomic and floristic differences between the vegetation types on serpentine and on non-serpentine substrates are very striking and the boundaries between these types are generally sharp. On either of the substrates there are also differences in the vegetation which correspond to differences in habitat. An outline of the Great Dyke environment is given. A number of plots, laid out in transects across the Great Dyke, were sampled according to the Braun-Blanquet approach. Six plant communities are distinguished and described in detail: one occurring on granite, two on pyroxenite and three on serpentine. The syntaxonomy of these communities is discussed. A riverine forest community which strongly differs from all these vegetation types is also described.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5052
    Keywords: Africa ; Diversity ; Dominance ; Grassland ; Miombo woodland ; Plant strategies ; Principal Components Analysis ; Reciprocal Averaging ; Rhodesia ; Serpentine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Contrasts in physiognomy and floristic composition of the vegetation of serpentine and non-serpentine substrates are very strong in the northern part of the Rhodesian Great Dyke, and the boundaries between these types are very sharp. Principal components analysis and reciprocal averaging are used to carry out a gradient analysis of the vegetation. The variation in the vegetation of the study area is interpreted in terms of one complex gradient representing a, series from relatively favourable to unfavourable for plant growth. Toxic effects of the substrates and water conditions are the main variables in this interpretation; the latter factor has a reversed effect on serpentine as compared to the non-serpentine substrates, and is less important than the toxicity factor. Comments are made on the table arrangement suggested by reciprocal averaging. The relatively favourable substrates were generally richer in species, but highest and lowest species numbers did not occur at the extremes of the interpreted gradient. The trend in the number of families per stand is similar to that in species numbers for the non-serpentine substrates, but is lowest in the badly-drained serpentine habitat interpreted as most unfavourable to plant growth. The species/family ratio per stand does not show much variation between any of the communities. The percentage of monocotyledonous species is strikingly higher in the communities on serpentine as compared to those in non-serpentine habitats. The total number of dominant species is not markedly different in the communities, but this means that dominant species are relatively more common in the floristically poorer communities of the serpentine, especially those with relatively high total cover values. Values for eveness and Simpson's index of heterogeneity calculated per stand largely confirm this. Again the number of monocotyledonous species amongst the dominants is surprisingly high in the communities on serpentine. Several suggestions explaining the relative success of monocotyledons in serpentine habitats are discussed.
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