4.1 Article

Vegetation composition and its relationship with the environment in mallines of north Patagonia, Argentina

Journal

WETLANDS ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 121-130

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11273-010-9205-z

Keywords

Vegetation classification; Vegetation ordination; Wet meadows

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Mallines are characteristic Patagonian wet meadows. The objectives of this study were to describe plant community composition in the main mallines in northern Patagonia and to determine the influence of selected environmental variables on the distribution of vegetation. Fifty-two sites were selected for vegetation surveys and measurements of water table (WT) depth, soil pH, electric conductivity (EC), and mean annual precipitation. We performed cluster analysis for vegetation classification and correspondence analysis (CA) and canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) for vegetation ordination. Plant composition was mostly related to both environmental variables and longitude and that it was not possible to disentangle the two (i.e. the vegetation was spatially structured). We defined three plant communities that differed along two main environmental gradients. The main gradient operates on a regional scale and is determined, from west to east, by a decrease in mean annual precipitation and an increase in the depth of the WT, soil pH, and EC. The secondary gradient operates on a site scale and is determined by topographic features inside the mallin and their influence on the hydrological regime (increasing moisture from the border towards the center). This second gradient allowed us to distinguish two plant communities, one of wet characteristics in the centers of the mallin, and another of mesic characteristics along the borders of the mallin.

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