Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia

An ecological study of the vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, in the Central Rift Valley of Ethiopia, was conducted. Vegetation data and some environmental variables including physical and chemical properties of the soil, altitude, slope, and ecological disturbance were collected and subjec...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Assegid Assefa, Tamrat Bekele, Sebsebe Demissew, Tesfaye Abebe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-01-01
Series:International Journal of Forestry Research
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7765688
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832559596670025728
author Assegid Assefa
Tamrat Bekele
Sebsebe Demissew
Tesfaye Abebe
author_facet Assegid Assefa
Tamrat Bekele
Sebsebe Demissew
Tesfaye Abebe
author_sort Assegid Assefa
collection DOAJ
description An ecological study of the vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, in the Central Rift Valley of Ethiopia, was conducted. Vegetation data and some environmental variables including physical and chemical properties of the soil, altitude, slope, and ecological disturbance were collected and subjected to the agglomerative hierarchical classification and ordination with the canonical correspondence analysis. For each of the community groups, the mean and standard errors were calculated from the environmental parameters to characterize the community types and quantitative relationships between environmental variables were analyzed by calculating Pearson’s product-moment correlation coefficient using the SAS computer software programme. A total of 198 plant species representing 79 families and 139 genera were collected and documented. Seven plant community types, namely, Vachellia brevispica Harms–Rhus natalensis Krauss, Ficus sur Forssk.–Vachellia albida (Del.) A. Chev., Panicum subalbidum Kunth–Cyperus latifolius Poir, Dodonaea angustifolia L. f.–Ximenia americana L., Combretum molle R.Br ex. G.Don–Combretum collinum Fresen., Ilex mitis (L.) Radlk–Olea europaea L. subsp. cuspidata, and Dichrostachys cinerea (L.) Wight & Arn, were identified. Ilex mitis–Olea europaea L. subsp. cuspidata community had the highest species richness, whereas the least species richness was recorded for the Panicum subalbidum–Cyperus latifolius community. The results of vegetation-environment relationships indicated that the measured environmental variables explained 74.99% of the total variation in floristic data. The results of the canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) of community-environment relationships indicated that among measured environmental variables, altitude (r2 0.0548, P<0.01), slope (r2 = 0.0241, P<0.01), pH (r2 = 0.01855, P<0.01), sodium (r2 = 0.01316, P<0.04), CEC (r2 = 0.01424, P<0.03), magnesium (r2 = 0.01282, P<0.04), potassium (r2 = 0.0152, P<0.02), and soil moisture content (SMC) (r2 = 0.01537, P<0.05) significantly explained the variation in species composition of the communities and their distribution. Therefore, ecosystem-oriented biodiversity conservation and restoration strategies will be implemented by considering these significant environmental variables.
format Article
id doaj-art-f5afbd38d1e14f52a4130dff08b25725
institution Kabale University
issn 1687-9376
language English
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series International Journal of Forestry Research
spelling doaj-art-f5afbd38d1e14f52a4130dff08b257252025-02-03T01:29:49ZengWileyInternational Journal of Forestry Research1687-93762024-01-01202410.1155/2024/7765688Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, EthiopiaAssegid Assefa0Tamrat Bekele1Sebsebe Demissew2Tesfaye Abebe3South Agricultural Research InstituteNational HerbariumNational HerbariumCollege of AgricultureAn ecological study of the vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, in the Central Rift Valley of Ethiopia, was conducted. Vegetation data and some environmental variables including physical and chemical properties of the soil, altitude, slope, and ecological disturbance were collected and subjected to the agglomerative hierarchical classification and ordination with the canonical correspondence analysis. For each of the community groups, the mean and standard errors were calculated from the environmental parameters to characterize the community types and quantitative relationships between environmental variables were analyzed by calculating Pearson’s product-moment correlation coefficient using the SAS computer software programme. A total of 198 plant species representing 79 families and 139 genera were collected and documented. Seven plant community types, namely, Vachellia brevispica Harms–Rhus natalensis Krauss, Ficus sur Forssk.–Vachellia albida (Del.) A. Chev., Panicum subalbidum Kunth–Cyperus latifolius Poir, Dodonaea angustifolia L. f.–Ximenia americana L., Combretum molle R.Br ex. G.Don–Combretum collinum Fresen., Ilex mitis (L.) Radlk–Olea europaea L. subsp. cuspidata, and Dichrostachys cinerea (L.) Wight & Arn, were identified. Ilex mitis–Olea europaea L. subsp. cuspidata community had the highest species richness, whereas the least species richness was recorded for the Panicum subalbidum–Cyperus latifolius community. The results of vegetation-environment relationships indicated that the measured environmental variables explained 74.99% of the total variation in floristic data. The results of the canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) of community-environment relationships indicated that among measured environmental variables, altitude (r2 0.0548, P<0.01), slope (r2 = 0.0241, P<0.01), pH (r2 = 0.01855, P<0.01), sodium (r2 = 0.01316, P<0.04), CEC (r2 = 0.01424, P<0.03), magnesium (r2 = 0.01282, P<0.04), potassium (r2 = 0.0152, P<0.02), and soil moisture content (SMC) (r2 = 0.01537, P<0.05) significantly explained the variation in species composition of the communities and their distribution. Therefore, ecosystem-oriented biodiversity conservation and restoration strategies will be implemented by considering these significant environmental variables.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7765688
spellingShingle Assegid Assefa
Tamrat Bekele
Sebsebe Demissew
Tesfaye Abebe
Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
International Journal of Forestry Research
title Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
title_full Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
title_short Ecological Study of the Vegetation in the Loka Abaya National Park, Ethiopia
title_sort ecological study of the vegetation in the loka abaya national park ethiopia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/7765688
work_keys_str_mv AT assegidassefa ecologicalstudyofthevegetationinthelokaabayanationalparkethiopia
AT tamratbekele ecologicalstudyofthevegetationinthelokaabayanationalparkethiopia
AT sebsebedemissew ecologicalstudyofthevegetationinthelokaabayanationalparkethiopia
AT tesfayeabebe ecologicalstudyofthevegetationinthelokaabayanationalparkethiopia