Original Research
A floristic classification of the vegetation of a forest-savanna boundary in southeastern Zimbabwe
Submitted: 08 October 1997 | Published: 08 October 1997
About the author(s)
I. Mapaure, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Zimbabwe, ZimbabweFull Text:
PDF (1MB)Abstract
The vegetation of Chirinda Forest boundary was classified into eight types using Two-way Indicator Species Analysis (TWINSPAN) and Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA). The moist forest comprises three types: Strychnos mellodora-Chrysophyllum gonmgosanum Forest on deep dolerite soils; Chrysophyllum gorungosanum-Myrianthus holstii Forest on shallow dolerite soils; and Teclea iiobilis-Ehretia cymosa Forest on drier, but deep dolerite soils. The non-forest vegetation comprises five types: Themeda triandra Grassland on shallow dolerite soils; Psidium guajava Bushland on sandstone; Bridelia micrantha-Harungana madagascariensis Mixed Woodland not restricted to any one particular soil type; Acacia karroo- Heteropyxis dehniae Woodland on shallow soils derived from sandstone but sometimes on dolerite; and Julbemardia globiflora-Brachystegia spiciformis (Miombo) Woodland on sandstone.
Keywords
Metrics
Total abstract views: 2333Total article views: 3097
Crossref Citations
1. The Enemy of My Enemy Hypothesis: Why Coexisting with Grasses May Be an Adaptive Strategy for Savanna Trees
Zak Ratajczak, Paolo D’Odorico, Kailiang Yu
Ecosystems vol: 20 issue: 7 first page: 1278 year: 2017
doi: 10.1007/s10021-017-0110-7