Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia: floristic composition and ecological characteristics

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia : floristic composition and ecological characteristics. / Theilade, Ida; Phourin, Chhang; Schmidt, Lars; Meilby, Henrik; Van De Bult, Martin; Friborg, Katrine Gro.

In: Nordic Journal of Botany, Vol. 2022, No. 8, e03494, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Theilade, I, Phourin, C, Schmidt, L, Meilby, H, Van De Bult, M & Friborg, KG 2022, 'Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia: floristic composition and ecological characteristics', Nordic Journal of Botany, vol. 2022, no. 8, e03494. https://doi.org/10.1111/njb.03494

APA

Theilade, I., Phourin, C., Schmidt, L., Meilby, H., Van De Bult, M., & Friborg, K. G. (2022). Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia: floristic composition and ecological characteristics. Nordic Journal of Botany, 2022(8), [e03494]. https://doi.org/10.1111/njb.03494

Vancouver

Theilade I, Phourin C, Schmidt L, Meilby H, Van De Bult M, Friborg KG. Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia: floristic composition and ecological characteristics. Nordic Journal of Botany. 2022;2022(8). e03494. https://doi.org/10.1111/njb.03494

Author

Theilade, Ida ; Phourin, Chhang ; Schmidt, Lars ; Meilby, Henrik ; Van De Bult, Martin ; Friborg, Katrine Gro. / Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia : floristic composition and ecological characteristics. In: Nordic Journal of Botany. 2022 ; Vol. 2022, No. 8.

Bibtex

@article{f75230f530e847babf3cd3363c1f6222,
title = "Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia: floristic composition and ecological characteristics",
abstract = "Current vegetation maps show evergreen forests of Cambodia as one homogenous forest type. However, ecological field studies in the central plains demonstrated a heterogenous mosaic of different evergreen forest types, each with a unique species composition and ecological characteristics. Based on six botanical expeditions, we describe four lowland evergreen forest types: 1) riverine forest dominated by Dipterocarpus costatus (Dipterocarpaceae); 2) tall dipterocarp forest dominated by Anisoptera costata (Dipterocarpaceae); 3) swamp forest dominated by Macaranga triloba (Euphorbiaceae); and 4) {\textquoteleft}Sralao', an open forest with a monodominance of Lagerstroemia cochinchinensis (Lythraceae). Ordination by non-metric multi-dimensional scaling (NMDS) indicated that the four forest types represent well-separated floristic entities with Sralao as the most deviant community. The highest species diversity was found in the riverine forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.65), followed by tall dipterocarp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.53) and swamp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.34), whereas the Sralao forest had the lowest species diversity (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 1.64). We argue that botanical fieldwork remains essential to refine vegetation maps otherwise based on remote sensing, and that knowledge of species composition is essential to conserve Indochina's vanishing evergreen forest biodiversity.",
author = "Ida Theilade and Chhang Phourin and Lars Schmidt and Henrik Meilby and {Van De Bult}, Martin and Friborg, {Katrine Gro}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1111/njb.03494",
language = "English",
volume = "2022",
journal = "Opera Botanica",
issn = "0078-5237",
publisher = "Council for Nordic Publication in Botany",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evergreen forest types of the central plains in Cambodia

T2 - floristic composition and ecological characteristics

AU - Theilade, Ida

AU - Phourin, Chhang

AU - Schmidt, Lars

AU - Meilby, Henrik

AU - Van De Bult, Martin

AU - Friborg, Katrine Gro

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Current vegetation maps show evergreen forests of Cambodia as one homogenous forest type. However, ecological field studies in the central plains demonstrated a heterogenous mosaic of different evergreen forest types, each with a unique species composition and ecological characteristics. Based on six botanical expeditions, we describe four lowland evergreen forest types: 1) riverine forest dominated by Dipterocarpus costatus (Dipterocarpaceae); 2) tall dipterocarp forest dominated by Anisoptera costata (Dipterocarpaceae); 3) swamp forest dominated by Macaranga triloba (Euphorbiaceae); and 4) ‘Sralao', an open forest with a monodominance of Lagerstroemia cochinchinensis (Lythraceae). Ordination by non-metric multi-dimensional scaling (NMDS) indicated that the four forest types represent well-separated floristic entities with Sralao as the most deviant community. The highest species diversity was found in the riverine forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.65), followed by tall dipterocarp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.53) and swamp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.34), whereas the Sralao forest had the lowest species diversity (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 1.64). We argue that botanical fieldwork remains essential to refine vegetation maps otherwise based on remote sensing, and that knowledge of species composition is essential to conserve Indochina's vanishing evergreen forest biodiversity.

AB - Current vegetation maps show evergreen forests of Cambodia as one homogenous forest type. However, ecological field studies in the central plains demonstrated a heterogenous mosaic of different evergreen forest types, each with a unique species composition and ecological characteristics. Based on six botanical expeditions, we describe four lowland evergreen forest types: 1) riverine forest dominated by Dipterocarpus costatus (Dipterocarpaceae); 2) tall dipterocarp forest dominated by Anisoptera costata (Dipterocarpaceae); 3) swamp forest dominated by Macaranga triloba (Euphorbiaceae); and 4) ‘Sralao', an open forest with a monodominance of Lagerstroemia cochinchinensis (Lythraceae). Ordination by non-metric multi-dimensional scaling (NMDS) indicated that the four forest types represent well-separated floristic entities with Sralao as the most deviant community. The highest species diversity was found in the riverine forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.65), followed by tall dipterocarp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.53) and swamp forest (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 2.34), whereas the Sralao forest had the lowest species diversity (urn:x-wiley:0107055X:media:njb12662:njb12662-math-0001 = 1.64). We argue that botanical fieldwork remains essential to refine vegetation maps otherwise based on remote sensing, and that knowledge of species composition is essential to conserve Indochina's vanishing evergreen forest biodiversity.

U2 - 10.1111/njb.03494

DO - 10.1111/njb.03494

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2022

JO - Opera Botanica

JF - Opera Botanica

SN - 0078-5237

IS - 8

M1 - e03494

ER -

ID: 310835589