Abstract

The tree community of an area of upper montane forest situated in the Perdizes Plateau, SE Brazil (21o36'S and 44o37'W), was surveyed with the purpose of assessing the correlations between their structural variations and environmental variables related to the substratum and edge effect. Variations were analyzed for physiognomic structure (tree density, basal area and size distribution) and community structure (species composition, distribution and diversity). Individual trees with diameter at breast height (dbh) > 5 cm were surveyed within 30 plots of 20 × 20 m where topographic data and samples of surface soil were also collected, the latter for chemical and textural analyses. The survey totaled 2,565 individual trees, 218 species, 116 genera and 55 families, on three soil classes: Litholic Neosols, Humic Cambisols, and Regolithic Neosols. The studied tree community corresponds to the floristic and physiognomic features of the upper montane forests of southeastern Brazil, differing from those of lower altitudes in the same region. Variations in species diversity and composition and in physiognomic structure showed correlations with environmental variables, making up two distinct vegetation formations: (a) a less diverse and taller tree community in the well-drained areas of the forest interior, corresponding to the Humic Cambisols and Regolithic Neosols; and (b) a more diverse and shorter tree community in the strongly drained and sloping areas of the forest edge which correspond to the Litholic Neosols. The presumably more heterogeneous environment of the forest edge is probably responsible for its higher species diversity.

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