Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4380240 Acta Ecologica Sinica 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Villages represent the source of human disturbance in mountain regions, but how they alter surrounding landscapes and further affect plant diversity distribution along altitudinal gradient is still not well documented. Although the unimodal pattern along latitudinal gradient and the hypothesis of immediate disturbance (IDH) have been supported in many studies, their coupling effects on plant diversity distribution have been given less attention. In this paper, the coupling effects surrounding mountain villages were detected: (1) altitude determined the mountain landscape at regional scale, while human disturbance altered landscape fragmentation and diversity at local scale surrounding villages. (2) With the reducing human disturbance away from villages, plant diversity decreased, then increased, and finally decreased in different land uses. The plant diversity of shrubs reached the lowest. With the increasing altitude, plant diversity of the forest represented the unimodal trend, but other land use types had different properties. (3) The mechanism of the coupling effects is that the combination of topographic and soil factors determines plant diversity distribution at both landscape and plant community levels surrounding villages.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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