Canonical and typological analysis of the relationship between soil and trees – A step toward ecosystem management
Özet
The goal of this study was to establish a correlation between physico-chemical soil properties and tree
species composition using Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA). After eliminating the
statistically insignificant soil chemical and physical parameters from the correlation analysis, five
factors remained: soil drainage, drought throughout the soil, drought in the root layer and dryness in
the topsoil during the vegetation period, the average depth of the soil and the average depth of the root
layer. The forest-typological basis was analyzed using data modified from studies such as
phytocoeonological studies (state guidelines and intensity of succession processes), studies of the
hydro-physical properties of the soil and studies of vegetation data for classes of development. The
most significant correlations, without exception, proved to be "saturated (stagnant) soil water" and
"day of drought in the upper soil zone" (axes F1 and F2) which together explained 75 to 85% of the
variance. The results show that hornbeam demonstrates the highest flexibility and durability in
stagnant groundwater and avoids dry soils. Oak was more drought resistant, and its occurrence is
therefore dependent on the depth of the root system. Beech does not tolerate dry soils. The results of
the forest-typological analysis were used to map the distribution of tree species and the soil moisture
deficit and they show clear similarities.
Key words: Canonical correspondence analysis, humidity of the soil, forest typology, ecosystem management.
Bağlantı
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/144127http://www.academicjournals.org/journal/AJAR/edition/12_February
Koleksiyonlar
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