Heterogenity of the vegetation of basaltic environments in central Argentina.

Authors

  • Juan José Cantero
  • José Mulko
  • César Núñez
  • Sebastián R. Zeballos
  • Jorge A. Sfragulla
  • Andrea Amuchastegui
  • Gloria E. Barboza
  • Franco Chiarini
  • Luis Ariza Espinar
  • Aldo A. Bonalumi
  • Pablo Brandolin
  • Marcelo Cabido

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v52.n1.16916

Keywords:

Basaltic environments, flora, plant communities, central Argentina.

Abstract

Heterogenity of the vegetation of basaltic environments in central Argentina. The flora and the vegetation of basaltic outcrops of Los Cóndores Mountains, central Argentina, are described. Plant communities were sampled following the Braun-Blanquet methods. The 98 relevés × 272 species matrix was classified through the ISOPAM method. The classification discriminated three main communities occurring in the three different substrates explored in this landscape: Rocky Islands (inselbergs), a Natural Matrix surrounding the Islands and an Agricultural Matrix, surrounding the whole basaltic area. The three communities differed in composition and physiognomy: the Islands were the less disturbed sites, reporting the highest plant species richness and diversity as well as the higher number of endemics, and the lowest number of exotic species. In the other extreme of the disturbance gradient, the Agricultural
Matrix showed the opposite patterns and is dominated by annual and perennial herbs, mainly weeds. While the number of aliens is low in the Islands and in the Natural Matrix, almost 50% of the species are exotic in the Agricultural Matrix. The results of this study reveal that the basaltic inselbergs are relevant
sites for the conservation of the natural heritage.

Downloads

Published

2017-05-11

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

“Heterogenity of the Vegetation of Basaltic Environments in Central Argentina”. 2017. Boletín De La Sociedad Argentina De Botánica (Journal of the Argentine Botanical Society 52 (1): 153-83. https://doi.org/10.31055/1851.2372.v52.n1.16916.

Similar Articles

81-90 of 583

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)