2017
DOI: 10.15244/pjoes/64458
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Influence of Slope Aspect on Plant Community Composition and its Implications for Restoration of a Chinese Mountain Range

Abstract: Excessive human disturbance (e.g., overgrazing, deforestation) has degraded the environment in the Qilian Mountains in China. Vegetative restoration is likely to be a crucial tool to restore these biologically significant habitats, but it is impossible to achieve this goal if the baseline plant community composition and its variation with local environmental conditions were not understood fully. To assess plant community composition by slope aspect, four different aspects -south-facing slope (SF), southwest-fa… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…While soil organic matter content of black alder increased from south (1.49%) to north (2.66%) facing slopes (p = 0.02), that of grasslands decreased (p = 0.037). The positive effect of north aspect on organic matter content by also found by Qin et al (2017). Increasing organic matter content in north aspect can be attributed to more organic carbon and more total nitrogen accumulation in the soil because of higher soil water content and less evaporation (Johnson et al, 2011 On the one hand, CaCO3 content of soils was not significantly affected by vegetation cover (p = 0.05) and vegetation cover*slope aspect interaction (p = 0.164), on the other hand, the content decreased from south (2.34%) to north (1.35%) without considering vegetation cover effect (p = 0.008) (Fig.…”
Section: Changes In Chemical Soil Propertiesmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…While soil organic matter content of black alder increased from south (1.49%) to north (2.66%) facing slopes (p = 0.02), that of grasslands decreased (p = 0.037). The positive effect of north aspect on organic matter content by also found by Qin et al (2017). Increasing organic matter content in north aspect can be attributed to more organic carbon and more total nitrogen accumulation in the soil because of higher soil water content and less evaporation (Johnson et al, 2011 On the one hand, CaCO3 content of soils was not significantly affected by vegetation cover (p = 0.05) and vegetation cover*slope aspect interaction (p = 0.164), on the other hand, the content decreased from south (2.34%) to north (1.35%) without considering vegetation cover effect (p = 0.008) (Fig.…”
Section: Changes In Chemical Soil Propertiesmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…In the alpine area, the effects of climatic variables on vegetation are emphasized by the harsh environmental conditions due to aspect, elevation, and slope. Aspect determines different light exposition, soil moisture, and nutrient availability, thus representing a direct driver of the botanical composition of pastures (e.g., Yanyan et al, 2017) and an indirect factor affecting biomass productivity and its quality (Dongdong et al, 2020). Increasing elevation determines a decrease in air temperature (0.65°C every 100 m) with consequent effects on vegetation productivity (biomass production is generally lower) and growing season length, which is shorter at higher elevation (Dongdong et al, 2020; Liu et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, all kinds of engineering construction activities have been booming, such as expressway and railway engineering, port engineering, energy development and utilization engineering, mineral resource mining, etc., These engineering construction activities will unavoidably form many bare rocky slopes, which not only destruct the vegetations and soil, damage the ecological landscapes but also easily give rise to water and soil loss, and induce geological disasters like collapse, landslide and debris flow [1] [2].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%