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Understory diversity and floristic differentiation of Kashmir Himalayan coniferous forests: implications for conservation

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Abstract

The temperate Kashmir Himalaya, regardless of its simple representation as a giant temperate forest, exhibits remarkable vegetation dissimilarity being inadequately perceived. We explored the species diversity and taxonomic composition of herbaceous stratum in 147 plots over 36.75 ha of temperate Kashmir Himalayan landscape, describing three heterogeneous forest types, viz., low-level blue pine (BP), mixed-conifer (MC), and subalpine (SA) forests. Regression and constrained ordination (canonical correspondence analysis) analyses are used to quantify the relevance of environmental variables in governing herbaceous species composition and diversity. Landscape-level richness of 245 species ranging from 113 species in BP forest to 173 species in SA forest is documented. Mixed conifer forest manifested maximal species richness and Whittaker-β score among the forest types. With an aggregate of 42 species, Asteraceae attributed the optimum species richness accompanied by Poaceae (19 spp.), Lamiaceae (16 spp.), and so on, besides 22 monotypic families. Fragaria nubicola proclaims the dominant species, while Trifolium pratens, Pimpinella diversifolia and Impatiens brachycentra represent the most significant indicator species in BP, MC and SA forests. The consequence of elevation gradient on species richness across the landscape proclaims a significant unimodal paradigm (p = 0.005) ascribed to environmental stress at both elevational extremes. Latitude and precipitation proved as influencing ecological gradients underpinning the distribution of species composition in BP forest. However, in MC and SA forests, geographic location and precipitation and elevation and precipitation are highly associated with CCA-1 axis. To optimize biodiversity protection, conservation efforts must take forest scale variations in flora into consideration.

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Acknowledgements

Authors thank the two anonymous reviewers for providing constructive suggestions. This current research work is in partial fulfilment of the Ph.D. requirement of AAD, who is thankful to University Grant Commission, Ministry of Education, Government of India for financial assistance under the Junior Research Fellowship (UGC-Ref. No.: 3796/706 (NET-JULY 2018)). AAD acknowledges the cooperation and obligatory field permissions from the Principal Chief Conservator of Forest, Jammu and Kashmir. Thanks to Department of Botany, University of Kashmir, for remunerated identification of botanical specimens. AAD is indebted to Bilal Ahmad Dar, Mudasir Ahmad Wani, Mushtaq Ahmad Dar, and forest watcher Tariq Ahmad for field assistance. We duly acknowledge the cartographic help from Ayushi Kurian.

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Dar, A.A., Parthasarathy, N. Understory diversity and floristic differentiation of Kashmir Himalayan coniferous forests: implications for conservation. Trop Ecol 64, 436–451 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42965-022-00252-y

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