Abstract

Lianas are important in forest ecosystem and strongly influence the forest dynamics and diversity. Lianas are common in the tropical moist deciduous and rain forests, which are competing with other forest trees. Little information is known on the habitat specialization in tropical lianas diversity and the root causes for variation among forests in liana species composition. A total of 170 liana species (≥ 1.5 cm girth at breast height) representing 109 genera and 43 families were reported in 5×5 m quadrate samples along with their climbing modes in the tropical forests of northern Eastern Ghats of Andhra Pradesh, India. A total of 210 grids were sampled in study area and reported that Convolvulaceae was the dominant family with 23 species followed by Papilionaceae, 22 species and Asclepiadaceae, 19 species and Ipomoea was the largest genera. Woody lianas were dominated by 128 species and these are classified into six climbing modes consisting in stem climbers (53.5%) that were the most predominant followed by stragglersunarmed (14.7%), stragglers armed and tendril climbers (13.5% each), root climbers (2.9%) and hook climbers (1.8%). The most dominant liana species in the northern Eastern Ghats were Acacia sinuata and Bauhinia vahlii. The results of this investigation suggests that better management and protection is an important for in situ conservation of liana diversity and involving local people is emphasized.

Highlights

  • Lianas are long-stemmed woody vines, which are fixed in the soil at ground level and depend on the physical support of other plants to reach the forest canopy (Araujo and Alves, 2010; Schnitzer and Bongers, 2002)

  • The study area contained a total of 170 liana species representing 109 genera and 43 families, recorded from northern Eastern Ghats of forests in the total of 210 grids (Tab. 1)

  • Muthumperumal and Parthasarathy (2009) enumerated 175 angiosperm climbing plants in 150 grids of southern Eastern Ghats; 60 liana species found in Maruthamalai hills of southern Western Ghats (Sarvalingam and Rajendran, 2012); 93 climbing plant species reported in land Atlantic forest, northern Brazil (Araujo and Alves, 2010); the total number of climbers that are found in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands amounts to 386 (AcevedoRodriguez, 2005)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lianas are long-stemmed woody vines, which are fixed in the soil at ground level and depend on the physical support of other plants to reach the forest canopy (Araujo and Alves, 2010; Schnitzer and Bongers, 2002). These are prominent features of most tropical forests, where their leaves can constitute a large amount of the total area of the entire forest community (Putz and Mooney, 1991). Lianas act as an indicator species response to increase CO2 concentrations and benefit from other anthropogenic

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call