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Interactions between vegetation dynamic and edaphic factors in the Great Salt Desert of central Iran
Authors:Hossein BASHARI
Institution:Department of Natural Resources, Isfahan University of Technology, Isfahan 8415683111, Iran;Department of Soil Science, College of Agriculture, Isfahan University of Technology, Isfahan 8415683111, Iran;Forests and Rangelands Research Department, Qom Agricultural and Natural Resources Research and Education Center, Agricultural Research, Education and Extension Organization (AREEO), Qom 3716184729, Iran
Abstract:Investigating the relationships between vegetation dynamic and edaphic factors provide management insights into factors affecting the growth and establishment of plant species and vegetation communities in saline areas. The aim of this study was to assess the spatial variability of various vegetation communities in relation to edaphic factors in the Great Salt Desert, central Iran. Fifteen vegetation communities were identified using the physiognomy-floristic method. Coverage and density of vegetation communities were determined using the transect plot method. Forty soil samples were collected from major horizons of fifteen profiles in vegetation communities, and analyzed in terms of following soil physical and chemical characteristics: soil texture, soluble Na+ concentration, sodium adsorption ratio(SAR), electrical conductivity(EC), pH, organic matter content, soluble Mg~(2+) and Ca~(2+) concentrations, carbonate and gypsum contents, and spontaneously-and mechanically-dispersible clay contents. Redundancy analysis was used to investigate the relationships between vegetation dynamic and edaphic factors. The generalized linear method(GLM) was used to find the plant species response curves against edaphic factors. Results showed that plant species responded differently to edaphic factors, in which soluble sodium concentration, EC, SAR, gypsum content and soil texture were identified as the most discriminative edaphic factors. The studied plant species were also found to have different ecological requirements and tolerance to edaphic factors, in which Tamarix aphylla and Halocnemum strobilaceum were identified as the most salt-resistant species in the region. Furthermore, the presence of Artemisia sieberi was highly related to soil sand and gypsum contents. The results implied that exploring the plant species response curves against edaphic factors can assist managers to lay out more appropriate restoration plans in similar arid areas.
Keywords:desert  generalized linear method  mechanically-dispersible clay  ordination  plant species response curves  spontaneously-dispersible clay  
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