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Diagnostic Species (diagnostic + species)
Selected AbstractsGrassland communities on a Sahelian peneplain in Burkina FasoFEDDES REPERTORIUM, Issue 1-2 2008J. V. Müller Dr. A detailed phytosociological analysis of grassland communities of a Sahelian peneplain in Burkina Faso (West Africa) is presented. The floristic structure of the vegetation was documented with 113 relevés, which were classified manually and in addition ordinated to characterize main floristic gradients. The topographical situation from high-lying areas of the peneplain with erosion of material to low-lying areas with accumulation of material turned out to be the most important differentiating factor in the data set. All grassland communities are dominated by annual grasses and have large distribution ranges. They colonize sandy-silty, loamy to clayey soils and can be water-saturated or repeatedly inundated during the rainy season, while dry, non-inundated habitats are also colonized. Many grasses are valuable fodder plants and are appreciated by livestock , the peneplain is economically highly important as a grazing ground. Whereas exozoochorous annual species are constantly present companions, perennial herbaceous species are almost completely missing. Stands were grouped into one alliance Panico laeti-Echinochloion colonae and only two phytocoenoses: a rankless Schoenefeldia gracilis -community (with two subcommunities: a typical subcommunity with a large ecological amplitude from sandy-silty to loamy soils, and an Aristida funiculata -subcommunity on sandy, dry, non-inundated soils) and Eragrostietum pilosae. The Eragrostietum pilosae grows in the low-lying areas of the peneplain and connects between communities of seasonally inundated lakes and the grasslands on the upper parts of the pene- plain. Following the topography, the two plant communities form a large transition (zonation complex). It is widespread across the study area and contains the diagnostic species of both plant communities. The plant communities are compared with other Sahelian grass-dominated plant communities, and with plant communities from the Sahara and the (© 2008 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) Grasfluren einer sahelischen Rumpffläche in Burkina Faso In diesem Beitrag wird eine detaillierte pflanzensoziologische Analyse der Grasfluren einer sahelischen Rumpffläche in Burkina Faso (Westafrika) präsentiert. Die floristische Struktur der Vegetation wurde mit 113 pflanzensoziologischen Aufnahmen dokumentiert. Diese wurden zunächst manuell klassifiziert und anschließend einem Ordinationsverfahren unterzogen, um die wichtigsten Gradienten im floristischen Datensatz aufzuzeigen. Die topographische Geländesituation der Rumpffläche, beginnend mit hochgelegenen Bereichen mit Materialaustrag bis in die Niederungen mit Materialeintrag, wurde als wichtigster differenzierender Faktor des floristischen Datensatzes identifiziert. Alle untersuchten Pflanzengesellschaften der Grasfluren haben große Verbreitungsgebiete und werden von annuellen Gräsern dominiert. Sie sind auf sandig-schluffigen, lehmigen bis tonigen Böden zu finden. Sie können in der Regenzeit entweder wassergesättigt oder wiederholt überflutet sein. Die Grasfluren sind auch auf trockenen, nicht überfluteten Standorten nachgewiesen. Viele der Grasarten sind vom Weidevieh geschätzte Futterpflanzen , die Rumpffläche dient als wirtschaftlich bedeutendes Weideland. Exozoochore, einjährige Arten sind hochstet als Begleiter vorhanden. Hingegen fehlen mehrjährige, krautige Arten fast vollständig. Die Bestände konnten einem pflanzensoziologischen Verband Panico laeti-Echinochloion colonae und zwei Pflanzengesellschaften zugeordnet werden. Die ranglose Schoenefeldia gracilis -Gesellschaft kommt in zwei Untereinheiten vor: eine typische Untereinheit mit breiter ökologischer Amplitude von sandig-schluffigen bis lehmigen Böden, und eine Aristida funiculata Untereinheit auf trockenen, sandigen, nicht überfluteten Böden. Das Eragrostietum pilosae kommt in den tiefliegenden Bereichen Sudanian zone. A close floristic relationship of Sahelian grassland communities with Saharan vegetation could be shown. der Rumpffläche vor und vermittelt zwischen den Pflanzengesellschaften temporärer Seen und den Grasfluren der hochgelegenen Bereiche der Rumpffläche. Der Geländesituation folgend bilden beide Pflanzengesellschaften einen breiten Übergangsbereich (Zonationskomplex). Dieser Übergangsbereich ist im Untersuchungsgebiet weit verbreitet und enthält diagnostische Arten beider Pflanzengesellschaften. Die beschriebenen Einheiten werden mit anderen grasdominierten Pflanzengesellschaften des Sahels sowie der Sahara und der Sudanzone verglichen. Eine enge floristische Beziehung der sahelischen Grasfluren mit Vegetationseinheiten der Sahara wird aufgezeigt. [source] Petrography and provenance of Laecanius Amphorae from Istria, northern Adriatic region, CroatiaGEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 5 2006Maria A. Mange Amphorae sherds from the Laecanius workshop of Roman Istria (10,5 B.C. and 78 A.D.), Croatia, were studied by integrating archaeological and geological techniques including fabric analysis, thin-section petrography, X-ray diffractometry (XRD), and heavy mineral analysis. The fabric of the sherds showed distinctive characteristics, permitting their classification and allocation into nine fabric groupss. Petrography revealed that quartz is the dominant clastic component, whereas carbonate is common as temper; XRD provided information on firing temperatures that ranged between 750 and 900°C. The sherds contain diverse heavy mineral suites with generally high epidote and garnet proportions; zircon is occasionally important. Garnet/epidote ratios and the presence of diagnostic species (pyroxene, hornblende) showed systematic variations that coincided with similar variations in fabric characteristics. Heavy mineral signatures of amphorae produced in other workshops proved essential in differentiating them from Laecanius sherds. A comparative heavy mineral analysis of terra rossa samples from the vicinity of the workshop indicated that terra rossa was the major source for the paste. Differences observed in the heavy mineral composition of the sherds and terra rossa were interpreted by the spatial heterogeneity of the latter and the mixing of the paste with sandy temper. Fresh Adriatic sponge spicules in the majority of Laecanius sherds and the temper-derived, generally immature heavy mineral assemblages suggest that sandy deposits from the Adriatic were used for the clastic temper. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] Statistical determination of diagnostic species for site groups of unequal sizeJOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 6 2006Lubomír Tichy Abstract Aim: Concentration of species occurrences in groups of classified sites can be quantified with statistical measures of fidelity, which can be used for the determination of diagnostic species. However, for most available measures fidelity depends on the number of sites within individual groups. As the classified data sets typically contain site groups of unequal size, such measures do not enable a comparison of numerical fidelity values of species between different site groups. We therefore propose a new method of measuring fidelity with presence/absence data after equalization of the size of the site groups. We compare the properties of this new method with other measures of statistical fidelity, in particular with the Dufrêne-Legendre Indicator Value (IndVal) index. Methods: The size of site groups in the data set is equalized, while relative frequencies of species occurrence within and outside of these groups are kept constant. Then fidelity is calculated using the phi coefficient of association. Results: Fidelity values after equalization are independent of site group size, but their numerical values vary independently of the statistical significance of fidelity. By changing the size of the target site group relative to the size of the entire data set, the fidelity measure can be made more sensitive to either common or rare species. We show that there are two modifications of the IndVal index for presence/absence data, one of which is also independent of the size of site groups. Conclusion: The phi coefficient applied to site groups of equalized size has advantages over other statistical measures of fidelity based on presence/absence data. Its properties are close to an intuitive understanding of fidelity and diagnostic species in vegetation science. Statistical significance can be checked by calculation of another fidelity measure that is a function of statistical significance, or by direct calculation of the probability of observed species concentrations by Fisher's exact test. An advantage of the new method over IndVal is its ability to distinguish between positive and negative fidelity. One can also weight the relative importance of common and rare species by changing the equalized size of the site groups. [source] Biogeographic analysis of endemic cacti of the Sierra Madre Oriental, MexicoBIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 2 2009HAMLET SANTA ANNA DEL CONDE JUÁREZ The distribution of cacti species that inhabit the Sierra Madre Oriental (SMO) was analysed. Grid-cells were analysed using parsimony analysis of endemicity (PAE) and endemism indices. Areas characterized by their diagnostic species were determined, aiming to propose areas for the conservation of threatened cacti. Distributional data were obtained from 1936 herbarium specimens, electronic information, and from field collections. Eight areas of endemism and three main clades were obtained from the grid-cell analysis. Areas obtained from the endemism indices are very similar to those obtained with the PAE, but differ in the association of grid-cells. PAE showed endemism patterns indicating that southern and central sections of the SMO province are the areas richest in geographically-restricted species. The results obtained with different endemism indices detected more or less the same areas, although the importance level is different. The corrected weighted endemism index can be considered as a reliable measure of endemism because it is unrelated to species richness. A regionalization of the SMO in three subprovinces is suggested, supported by characteristic cacti taxa and the existence of natural barriers. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 97, 373,389. [source] |