14 research outputs found

    The Cultivation and Use of Taro and Fruit Pandanus among he Duna of the Aluni Valley of the Southern Highlands of Paua New Guinea

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    Any scholar interested in the plants or practices associated with vegeculture, past or present, will value the contributions in this volume. It speaks to agricultural issues relevant far beyond the geographic focus indicated by the title, and it addresses a wide variety of taxa from the perspectives of plant physiology, molecular biology, ethnography, archaeology, and agricultural development. Moreover, Japanese scholarship is highlighted, providing an excellent forum for those contributors whose research is not widely disseminated in English. This volume results from a symposium held Nov. 06–09, 2000 at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka

    Ecological gradients within the riparian forests of the lower Caura River, Venezuela

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    The distribution of woody species within the 260 km-long riparian corridor of the Lower Caura River, a nutrient-poor tributary of the Orinoco River, draining the Guiana Shield in Venezuela is related to environmental variables. TWINSPAN clustering and a Canonical Correspondence ordination were used on abundance data for the 110 most common tree species in 51 sample plots. Four groups are identified: (i) upstream of La Mura Rapids, narrow floodplains in constrained valleys with steep slopes show marked differences between sites dominated by channel lateral accretion (levees, Group B) and overbank deposition (swamps, Group A), (ii) downstream of the rapids, levees (Group C) are differentiated from a more heterogeneous floodplain (Group D) influenced by a backwater effect caused by the ponding of the Caura River by the Orinoco. A Multiple discriminant analysis of these groups resulted in a function including depth of inundation, ratio of alkaline/alkaline earth major cations, and soil phosphorous content, which accounted for 83% of the variance between the four groups. Inundation level and phosphorous content were also the most significant variables in the ordination, within which the first two axes explained 48% of the species- environment relationships. Tree density, species richness and diversity (H') are shown to change significantly along the lower Caura with highest values associated with levees in sectors upstream of the La Mura Rapids; effects of terrestrialization and intermediate disturbance are proposed to explain these patterns. Floristic elements typical of both Amazonian Igapó and Várzea forests are shown to occur along the whole riparian corridor of the lower Caura, but the majority occur downstream of La Mura Rapids. The intermediate nutritional status of the Caura River and a hydroecological confluence effect associated with higher flooding depths and stronger biogeochemical gradients along the lower reach are suggested to explain the co-occurrence of Igapó and Várzea species

    Ecohydrology of riparian forests in the Orinoco River Basin

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    This paper describes some important ecohydrological interactions within riparian forests in lower Orinoco using the Caura and Mapire rivers in Venezuela. The importance of riparian forests and hydrological seasonality for aquatic faunal ecology and human use patterns are examined using the Caura River. On the other hand, the influence of ecohydrology on the composition, structure and diversity of riparian forests communities was analysed using the Mapire River. By comparing the decomposition processes of the Caura and Mapire floodplains, ecohydrological interactions of biochemical gradients along river confluence zones are discussed
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