4.3 Article

Modern pollen rain from the Biligirirangan-Melagiri hills of southern Eastern Ghats, India

Journal

REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY
Volume 108, Issue 3-4, Pages 175-196

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0034-6667(99)00039-1

Keywords

correspondence analysis; deciduous forests; humidity and physiognomic gradients; modern pollen rain; southeast India; vegetation types

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A total of 39 soil surface samples collected between 11 degrees 30'N 76 degrees 45'E and 12 degrees 45'N 78 degrees 15'E from the mainly deciduous forests in the Biligirirangan-Melagiri hills of the southern Eastern Ghats were analysed for their pollen content. The samples are distributed among four different deciduous and evergreen vegetation types between 210 and 1700 m altitudes and fall within three distinct rainfall regimes. The aims of this paper are to provide new data on the modern pollen rain from the Southern Eastern Ghats, a region characterized by a unique and complex climate and vegetation, and to interpret these data using multivariate statistics and the diagram of pollen percentages. We could distinguish first between the deciduous and the evergreen forests and then also between different types of deciduous forest. The distinction between the evergreen and deciduous forests was based on a humidity gradient and that among the deciduous forests on a physiognomic gradient identified through correspondence analysis. The above analysis also allowed us to identify a set of 14 pollen taxa markers and 11 associated pollen taxa that help differentiate the evergreen from deciduous forests. Similarly, a set of 12 pollen taxa markers and six associated pollen taxa was demarcated to help distinguish woodland formations from scrub and thicket formations, among the deciduous vegetation. We could also differentiate amongst the four distinct vegetation types sampled, on the basis of distinct associations of both tree and herb pollen taxa according to their relative abundance in the pollen diagram as well as on the proportion of total arboreal pollen. The ground cover of grasses and other herbaceous plants in the deciduous forests is effectively demonstrated by percentages of non-arboreal pollen varying between 40 and 70%. The 1000 m altitude limit reflecting a gradient of humidity and the physiognomic gradient among deciduous forests seem to be important in this region. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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