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Ultramafic geoecology of South and Southeast Asia

期刊

BOTANICAL STUDIES
卷 58, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40529-017-0167-9

关键词

Adaptations; Conservation; Edaphic endemism; Edaphic flora; Extreme environments; Geobotany; Plant-soil relations; Serpentine vegetation; Ultramafic plants; Metal hyperaccumulators

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [DE160100429]
  2. French National Research Agency through the national Investissements d'avenir program [ANR-10-LABX-21]
  3. Project Agromine [ANR-14-CE04-0005]
  4. US Research Scholar Fulbright Award
  5. National Institute of Fundamental Studies, Kandy, Sri Lanka

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Globally, ultramafic outcrops are renowned for hosting floras with high levels of endemism, including plants with specialised adaptations such as nickel or manganese hyperaccumulation. Soils derived from ultramafic regoliths are generally nutrient-deficient, have major cation imbalances, and have concomitant high concentrations of potentially phytotoxic trace elements, especially nickel. The South and Southeast Asian region has the largest surface occurrences of ultramafic regoliths in the world, but the geoecology of these outcrops is still poorly studied despite severe conservation threats. Due to the paucity of systematic plant collections in many areas and the lack of georeferenced herbarium records and databased information, it is not possible to determine the distribution of species, levels of endemism, and the species most threatened. However, site-specific studies provide insights to the ultramafic geoecology of several locations in South and Southeast Asia. The geoecology of tropical ultramafic regions differs substantially from those in temperate regions in that the vegetation at lower elevations is generally tall forest with relatively low levels of endemism. On ultramafic mountaintops, where the combined forces of edaphic and climatic factors intersect, obligate ultramafic species and hyperendemics often occur. Forest clearing, agricultural development, mining, and climate change-related stressors have contributed to rapid and unprecedented loss of ultramafic-associated habitats in the region. The geoecology of the large ultramafic outcrops of Indonesia's Sulawesi, Obi and Halmahera, and many other smaller outcrops in South and Southeast Asia, remains largely unexplored, and should be prioritised for study and conservation.

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