3 research outputs found

    Morphological and Anatomical Characteristics of Moroccan Fir Needles in Talassemtane National Park, North-Western Rif Region, Morocco

    Get PDF
    Moroccan fir, Abies maroccana Trab. forms a unique forest community in the Mediterranean basin and has a great ecological and biological values in Moroccan Rif Mountains. However, morphological and anatomical characters of the needles are poorly investigated for A. maroccana. This research examined the morphological and anatomical characters of Moroccan fir needles in order to determine the phenotypic needles traits of Abies maroccana. The study was carried out in the National Park of Talassemtane, Western Rif, Morocco. Data was collected from two-year-old needles in six stands. In each site, seven trees were selected, and 60 needles were collected from each tree. Five morphological and one anatomical characters of the needles were examined. The variance analysis (ANOVA) of quantitative needles variables revealed significant inter-tree morphological variability of needles of A. maroccana. Based on the morphological characters studied, the multivariate analysis (PCA) separated all trees of Moroccan fir into four groups: (A) long, thin and large; (B) long, thin and narrow; (C) short, large and thick; and finally (D) short and thick needles. As demonstrated here, the fir needles were mainly characterized by: 2 types of apex (obtuse–acute and acute needles), a broad base and the marginal resin canals. This diversity can be attributed to genetic variation and / or influence of ecological conditions

    Characterizing spatial structure of Abies marocana forest through point pattern analysis

    Get PDF
    Aim of study: Understanding small-scale patterns caused by stochastic factors or community interactions driving forest structure and diversity of Moroccan fir Abies marocana Trab.Area of study: Talassemtane fir forest, Talassemtane National Park, Rif Mountains, northern Morocco.Material and methods: Eight plots representative of the structural variability of A. marocana forests were selected, and all tree individuals with diameter at breast height (dbh) ≥2 cm were mapped and measured. We performed four types of spatial point pattern analyses: (1) Univariate analyses to explore the overall trees spatial pattern, (2) bivariate analyses to assess the spatial relationship between juveniles and A. marocana adults, (3) correlation between tree sizes (dbh) and distance between points pairs using the univariate mark correlation function, and (4) random labeling analyses between dominant and suppressed Moroccan fir individuals to assess competition patterns.Main results: We found a strong spatial aggregation of fir individuals and a positive intraspecific association between juveniles and adult trees. However, there were weak but significant distance-dependent effect on tree size and density-dependent effect on suppression pattern.Research highlights: Shade-tolerance, seed dispersal and/or microsite heterogeneity might play important roles in the observed fir patterns. Our results provide a basic knowledge on within-stand Moroccan fir spatial distribution, with implications for adaptive management of these relic forests, and prompting to further research to test advanced hypotheses.Additional key words: Moroccan fir; Talassemtane National Park; Rif forest; Spatial analysis; summary statistics; facilitation; aggregation.Abbreviations used: MF (Moroccan fir); Talassemtane National Park (TNP); dbh (diameter at breast height); Univariate pair-correlation function (g(r)); Heterogeneous Poisson (HP); Bivariate pair-correlation function (g12(r)); Univariate mark correlation function (kmm(r)), Mark connection function (p12(r))

    Characterizing spatial structure of Abies marocana forest through point pattern analysis

    No full text
    Aim of study: Understanding small-scale patterns caused by stochastic factors or community interactions driving forest structure and diversity of Moroccan fir Abies marocana Trab. Area of study: Talassemtane fir forest, Talassemtane National Park, Rif Mountains, northern Morocco. Material and methods: Eight plots representative of the structural variability of A. marocana forests were selected, and all tree individuals with diameter at breast height (dbh) ≥2 cm were mapped and measured. We performed four types of spatial point pattern analyses: (1) Univariate analyses to explore the overall trees spatial pattern, (2) bivariate analyses to assess the spatial relationship between juveniles and A. marocana adults, (3) correlation between tree sizes (dbh) and distance between points pairs using the univariate mark correlation function, and (4) random labeling analyses between dominant and suppressed Moroccan fir individuals to assess competition patterns. Main results: We found a strong spatial aggregation of fir individuals and a positive intraspecific association between juveniles and adult trees. However, there were weak but significant distance-dependent effect on tree size and density-dependent effect on suppression pattern. Research highlights: Shade-tolerance, seed dispersal and/or microsite heterogeneity might play important roles in the observed fir patterns. Our results provide a basic knowledge on within-stand Moroccan fir spatial distribution, with implications for adaptive management of these relic forests, and prompting to further research to test advanced hypotheses
    corecore