Title of article :
Weed vegetation ecology of arable land in Salalah, Southern Oman
Author/Authors :
El-Sheikh, Mohamed A. Damanhour University - Faculty of Science - Department of Botany, Egypt
From page :
291
To page :
304
Abstract :
This paper applies multivariate statistical methods to a data set of weed releves from arable fields in two different habitat types of coastal and mountainous escarpments in Southern Oman. The objectives were to test the effect of environmental gradients, crop plants and time on weed species composition, to rank the importance of these particular factors, and to describe the patterns of species composition and diversity associated with these factors. Through the application of TWINSPAN, DCA and CCA programs on data relating to 102 species recorded in 28 plots and farms distributed in the study area, six plant communities were identified: I- Dichanthium micranthum, II- Cynodon dactylon–D. micranthum, III- Convolvulus arvensis, IV- C. dactylon–Sonchus oleraceus, V- Amaranthus viridis and VI- Suaeda aegyptiaca–Achyranthes aspera. The ordination process (CCA) provided a sequence of plant communities and species diversity that correlated with some anthropogenic factors, physiographic variables and crop types. Therefore, length of time since farm construction, disturbance levels and altitude are the most important factors related to the occurrence of the species. The perennial species correlated with the more degraded mountain areas of new farm stands, whereas most of the annuals correlated with old lowland and less disturbed farms.
Keywords :
Agro , ecosystems , Ecology , Species richness , Interspecific competition , Seed dispersal , Weed vegetation
Journal title :
Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
Journal title :
Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
Record number :
2665730
Link To Document :
بازگشت