Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China

Abstract We conducted floristic and community analyses to compare the floristic composition, forest structure, taxonomic richness, and species diversity between two tiankeng (large doline, or sinkhole) habitats and two outside-tiankeng habitats of forest fragments in a degraded karst area in southwe...

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Main Authors: Yuqiao Su, Qiming Tang, Fuyan Mo, Yuegui Xue
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-06-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04592-x
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spelling doaj-4d006f50f63742b3b188b7a6c807bf642020-12-08T00:12:19ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-06-017111010.1038/s41598-017-04592-xKarst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern ChinaYuqiao Su0Qiming Tang1Fuyan Mo2Yuegui Xue3College of Life Sciences, Guangxi Normal UniversityCollege of Life Sciences, Guangxi Normal UniversityCollege of Life Sciences, Guangxi Normal UniversityCollege of Life Sciences, Guangxi Normal UniversityAbstract We conducted floristic and community analyses to compare the floristic composition, forest structure, taxonomic richness, and species diversity between two tiankeng (large doline, or sinkhole) habitats and two outside-tiankeng habitats of forest fragments in a degraded karst area in southwestern China. We found remarkably higher taxonomic richness in the tiankeng habitats than in the outside-tiankeng habitats at the species, generic, and familial levels. The inside-tiankeng habitats had higher floristic diversity but lower dominance. The remarkably higher uniqueness at all taxonomic levels and the much larger tree size in the two tiankeng habitats than in the outside-tiankeng habitats demonstrated the old-growth and isolated nature of the tiankeng flora. Plot-scale species richness, Shannon-Wiener index, Pielou’s evenness, and Berger-Parker dominance significantly differed across habitats. Heterogeneity in floristic composition at the species, generic, and familial levels was extremely significant across habitats. In pairwise comparisons, except for the Chuandong Tiankeng-Shenmu Tiankeng pair, all the pairs showed significant between-habitat heterogeneity in floristic composition. Our results suggest that as oases amidst the degraded karst landscape, tiankengs serve as modern refugia that preserve old-growth forest communities with their rich floristic diversity, and can provide a model for habitat conservation and forest restoration in that area.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04592-x
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuqiao Su
Qiming Tang
Fuyan Mo
Yuegui Xue
spellingShingle Yuqiao Su
Qiming Tang
Fuyan Mo
Yuegui Xue
Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
Scientific Reports
author_facet Yuqiao Su
Qiming Tang
Fuyan Mo
Yuegui Xue
author_sort Yuqiao Su
title Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
title_short Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
title_full Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
title_fullStr Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
title_full_unstemmed Karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern China
title_sort karst tiankengs as refugia for indigenous tree flora amidst a degraded landscape in southwestern china
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract We conducted floristic and community analyses to compare the floristic composition, forest structure, taxonomic richness, and species diversity between two tiankeng (large doline, or sinkhole) habitats and two outside-tiankeng habitats of forest fragments in a degraded karst area in southwestern China. We found remarkably higher taxonomic richness in the tiankeng habitats than in the outside-tiankeng habitats at the species, generic, and familial levels. The inside-tiankeng habitats had higher floristic diversity but lower dominance. The remarkably higher uniqueness at all taxonomic levels and the much larger tree size in the two tiankeng habitats than in the outside-tiankeng habitats demonstrated the old-growth and isolated nature of the tiankeng flora. Plot-scale species richness, Shannon-Wiener index, Pielou’s evenness, and Berger-Parker dominance significantly differed across habitats. Heterogeneity in floristic composition at the species, generic, and familial levels was extremely significant across habitats. In pairwise comparisons, except for the Chuandong Tiankeng-Shenmu Tiankeng pair, all the pairs showed significant between-habitat heterogeneity in floristic composition. Our results suggest that as oases amidst the degraded karst landscape, tiankengs serve as modern refugia that preserve old-growth forest communities with their rich floristic diversity, and can provide a model for habitat conservation and forest restoration in that area.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04592-x
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