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Groundlayer Vegetation Ordination and Site-Factor Analysis of the Wright State University Woods (Greene County, Ohio)

Abstract

Author Institution: Department of Biological Sciences, Wright State UniversityDetrended correspondence analysis (DECORANA) was used to examine groundlayer vegetation variation among seven locations of differing topography and successional age in the Wright State University woods (Greene County, OH). Two young sites (60 and 40 years since agricultural abandonment) and five older sites (one floodplain, one slope, and three uplands) were selected a priori and sampled four times in 1987. Taxon presences were recorded in 100 plots per location, and 12 environmental variables were measured from a subset of these plots. DECORANA ordination revealed that site age was the most important large scale factor affecting groundlayer vegetation. Topography was shown to be an important factor in the old growth sites. Stepwise linear regression with DECORANA plot scores as dependent variables and environmental factors as independent variables indicated that soil moisture content was the most important measured site factor associated with vegetation variation. This relationship was significant for vegetation along the overall successional gradient (r2 = 0.49) with soil moisture content positively correlated with site age. It was also significant along the old growth topographic gradient (r2 = 0.46) with soil moisture content negatively correlated with topographic elevation

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