4.5 Article

Floristic diversity and vegetation of the az Zakhnuniyah Island, Arabian Gulf, Saudi Arabia

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e09996

Keywords

Biodiversity; Cluster analysis; Conservation; Halophytes; Salt marshes; Ordination

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Islands are recognized as hotspots of diversity, with the study in Az Zakhnuniyah Island revealing three vegetation clusters in different habitats, reflecting salinity gradient and soil texture variations. Most plant species are used for medicinal purposes and grazing.
Islands are broadly recognized as hotspots of ecology, biological and geophysical diversity with unique plant species. The present study aimed to address the floristic composition in the Az Zakhnuniyah Island along the Arabian Gulf of Saudi Arabia. A total of 21 quadrats, of 100 m(2) each were sampled, and both relative density and cover were determined. Classification (Agglomerative Hierarchical Clustering {AHC} and ordination [Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA) and Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA)] were applied to identify vegetation clusters and their correlation to the underlying soil factors. Fifty plant species belonging to 21 families were recorded. Amaranthaceae (22.9%), Poaceae (12.5%), Asteraceae and Zygophyllaceae (8.33% each) were the largest represented families. Therophytes and chamaephytes were the most represented life-forms, indicating saline-desert vegetation. Most of the surveyed plant species are used for medicinal purposes and grazing. AHC and DCA allowed identifying three vegetation clusters within three distinct habitats: cluster (A): Halopeplis perfoliata-Suaeda vermiculata in wet salt-marsh habitat, cluster (B): Limonium axillare-Zygophyllum mandaville in sabkha, and cluster (C): Heliotropium bacciferum-Panicum turgidum in sand dune habitat within the island. The CCA results imply strong relationships between floristic composition and salinity measures (CaCO3, electric conductivity, Mg+2, Na+, K+, Cl- and SO4) and soil texture. The current vegetation pattern in Zakhnuniyah Island reflects a salinity gradient with variations in soil texture. Knowledge of the floristic composition and its correlation to the environmental factors within islands should guide future conservation strategy and management efforts.

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