2020
DOI: 10.1007/s40415-020-00607-6
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Bryophyte diversity, life-forms, floristics and vertical distribution in a degraded karst sinkhole in Guizhou, China

Abstract: The conservation of bryophyte diversity is of major importance, extending even to the bryophytes of degraded karst sinkholes. To demonstrate the effects of a degraded karst sinkhole environment on bryophyte diversity and vertical distribution, Guda Sinkhole, an extreme example of habitat degradation in Guizhou Province, China, was selected as the study area. Abundance index, α and β Diversity Index, floristic spectrum analysis, CCA and Generalized Linear Model were applied in this study. A total of 75 bryophyt… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Karst tiankeng ecosystems have unique karst habitats such as higher oxygen ion concentration, greater air humidity, lower temperature, and fertile soil, which provide favorable conditions for plant growth [18] and preserve the most intact tiankeng primitive or quasi-primitive forests due to the steep cliff walls and little interference from human activities, which are a refuge for modern karst forest plants [19]. At present, studies on the flora of tiankeng mainly focus on species diversity [20,21], plant functional traits [22][23][24], soil enzyme activity [25,26], and the relationship between tiankeng geomorphology and vegetation [27], etc. Few studies have been conducted on interspecific associations and do not link the development stages of the entire tiankeng, and few studies have been conducted on the interspecific associations and community stability of herbs in different developmental stages of tiankeng.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Karst tiankeng ecosystems have unique karst habitats such as higher oxygen ion concentration, greater air humidity, lower temperature, and fertile soil, which provide favorable conditions for plant growth [18] and preserve the most intact tiankeng primitive or quasi-primitive forests due to the steep cliff walls and little interference from human activities, which are a refuge for modern karst forest plants [19]. At present, studies on the flora of tiankeng mainly focus on species diversity [20,21], plant functional traits [22][23][24], soil enzyme activity [25,26], and the relationship between tiankeng geomorphology and vegetation [27], etc. Few studies have been conducted on interspecific associations and do not link the development stages of the entire tiankeng, and few studies have been conducted on the interspecific associations and community stability of herbs in different developmental stages of tiankeng.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%