Tree-liana relationships in a tropical evergreen forest at Varagalaiar, Anamalais, Western Ghats, India

Citation
S. Muthuramkumar et N. Parthasarathy, Tree-liana relationships in a tropical evergreen forest at Varagalaiar, Anamalais, Western Ghats, India, J TROP ECOL, 17, 2001, pp. 395-409
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY
ISSN journal
02664674 → ACNP
Volume
17
Year of publication
2001
Part
3
Pages
395 - 409
Database
ISI
SICI code
0266-4674(200105)17:<395:TRIATE>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
In a 30-ha permanent plot of tropical evergreen forest at Varagalaiar, Indi an Western Ghats, all trees greater than or equal to 30 cm girth at breast height (gbh) were examined for the presence of lianas greater than or equal to 1 cm dbh. The plot contained 13 445 trees in 152 species and 11 200 lia nas in 75 species. Twenty-eight per cent of trees supported lianas and tile mean number of lianas per tree was 0.38 +/-0.72. Association analysis betw een lianas and trees of 16 tree families and 20 abundant tree species indic ated that tree susceptibility to lianas was better pronounced at species ra ther than at family level. Overall, at Varagalalar site, tile aggregation o f lianas followed neither Poisson nor clumped distribution. Among the four dominant tree families Dipterocarpaccae and Clusiaceae fit to the negative binomial model better than Euphorbiaceae and Meliaceae. These four families differed in their susceptibility level with 34.6%, 36.7%, 24.1% and 27.7% of trees greater than or equal to 30 cm gbh respectively supporting lianas. At the species level, the proportion of trees with lianas was positively c orrelated with the mean branch free bole height of trees greater than or eq ual to 30-40 and greater than or equal to 40 cm gbh classes, and the mean n umber of lianas per tree was also positively correlated with the mean branc h bole height of trees greater than or equal to 39 cm gbh. Of the 16 abunda nt families, Euphorbiaceae contributed 31% and dominated the lower canopy, but its susceptibility to lianas was lower when compared to most other fami lies.