Abstract
Environmental factors governing the composition of riparian woodlands of the Gregory Rift Valley, northern Kenya were investigated. We collected tree species composition data on elevational transects along four active stream channels and two recently abandoned channels in Turkana District, Kenya and examined variation in riparian woodland species richness and composition at two scales: first, regional differences among channels and second, patterns along individual channels. The major factors governing woodland composition were: geographic location in relation to rainfall distribution, local heterogeneity in stream substrate, fluvial disturbance within individual channels and, in some cases, location along elevation gradients. Species richness increased with increasing rainfall. There were no significant differences in the composition of woodlands associated with active and recently abandoned channel segments. However, the species richness of riparian woodlands along abandoned channel segments seemed to decline with time since abandonment. The species richness of riparian woodlands in Turkana is an order of magnitude lower than that of comparable neotropical dry forests.
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Wyant, J.G., Ellis, J.E. Compositional patterns of riparian woodlands in the Rift Valley of northern Kenya. Vegetatio 89, 23–37 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00134432
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00134432
Keywords
- Arid tropical ecosystem
- Biodiversity
- Paleotropics
- Riparian vegetation