Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile

Artículo de publicación ISI Temperature is one of the major abiotic factors influencing distribution and productivity of alpine plant species. Although some edaphic parameters (e.g. soil acidity) have also been suggested as determinants in the spatial distribution of alpine vegetation, there is litt...

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Main Authors: Anic, Vinka, Díaz Forester, Javiera, Bustamante, Elena, Fuente, Luz María de la, Casale, Jean Francois, Harpe, Jean Paul de la, Montenegro, Gloria, Ginocchio, Rosanna
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: INST ARCTIC ALPINE RES, UNIV COLORADO 2010
Subjects:
Isi
Online Access:http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/14749
id ftunivchilecap:oai:www.captura.uchile.cl:2250/14749
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivchilecap:oai:www.captura.uchile.cl:2250/14749 2023-05-15T18:40:32+02:00 Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile Anic, Vinka Díaz Forester, Javiera Bustamante, Elena Fuente, Luz María de la Casale, Jean Francois Harpe, Jean Paul de la Montenegro, Gloria Ginocchio, Rosanna 2010-01 http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/14749 en eng INST ARCTIC ALPINE RES, UNIV COLORADO CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY TUNDRA COMMUNITIES SPECIES-DIVERSITY METAL TOLERANCE MOUNT KINABALU SOUTH-AMERICA HEAVY-METALS VEGETATION COPPER Artículo de Revista 2010 ftunivchilecap 2013-12-20T10:27:45Z Artículo de publicación ISI Temperature is one of the major abiotic factors influencing distribution and productivity of alpine plant species. Although some edaphic parameters (e.g. soil acidity) have also been suggested as determinants in the spatial distribution of alpine vegetation, there is little background on the importance of soil chemical properties in altitudinal gradients, particularly in the high Andes. The present study determined whether soil chemical properties affect spatial distribution and abundance of alpine plants in an altitudinal gradient in the Andes of central Chile, emphasizing metal content. A direct gradient analysis took place at Yerba Loca Natural Sanctuary (YLNS), based on a geobotanical sampling conducted in 73 sites distributed from 1970 to 3330 m a.s.l. According to a Canonical Correspondence Analysis, the main soil chemical factors that explain the pattern of compositional variation of high Andean vegetation are, besides altitude, total soil copper (Cu) content, percentage of soil organic matter, and available phosphorus and nitrogen. An analysis of shoot Cu content conducted in 19 plant species found in sites with highest soil Cu contents (.250 mg kg21) showed high levels of Cu in their shoots (.100 mg kg21). These results demonstrate species or ecotypes with optimal distribution in soils with high Cu contents, such as Armeria maritima, Trisetum lasiolepis, and Montiopsis potentilloides, which may have tolerance to this metal. Article in Journal/Newspaper Tundra Universidad de Chile: Captura Isi ENVELOPE(-38.550,-38.550,65.617,65.617)
institution Open Polar
collection Universidad de Chile: Captura
op_collection_id ftunivchilecap
language English
topic CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS
NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
TUNDRA COMMUNITIES
SPECIES-DIVERSITY
METAL TOLERANCE
MOUNT KINABALU
SOUTH-AMERICA
HEAVY-METALS
VEGETATION
COPPER
spellingShingle CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS
NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
TUNDRA COMMUNITIES
SPECIES-DIVERSITY
METAL TOLERANCE
MOUNT KINABALU
SOUTH-AMERICA
HEAVY-METALS
VEGETATION
COPPER
Anic, Vinka
Díaz Forester, Javiera
Bustamante, Elena
Fuente, Luz María de la
Casale, Jean Francois
Harpe, Jean Paul de la
Montenegro, Gloria
Ginocchio, Rosanna
Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
topic_facet CANONICAL CORRESPONDENCE-ANALYSIS
NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
TUNDRA COMMUNITIES
SPECIES-DIVERSITY
METAL TOLERANCE
MOUNT KINABALU
SOUTH-AMERICA
HEAVY-METALS
VEGETATION
COPPER
description Artículo de publicación ISI Temperature is one of the major abiotic factors influencing distribution and productivity of alpine plant species. Although some edaphic parameters (e.g. soil acidity) have also been suggested as determinants in the spatial distribution of alpine vegetation, there is little background on the importance of soil chemical properties in altitudinal gradients, particularly in the high Andes. The present study determined whether soil chemical properties affect spatial distribution and abundance of alpine plants in an altitudinal gradient in the Andes of central Chile, emphasizing metal content. A direct gradient analysis took place at Yerba Loca Natural Sanctuary (YLNS), based on a geobotanical sampling conducted in 73 sites distributed from 1970 to 3330 m a.s.l. According to a Canonical Correspondence Analysis, the main soil chemical factors that explain the pattern of compositional variation of high Andean vegetation are, besides altitude, total soil copper (Cu) content, percentage of soil organic matter, and available phosphorus and nitrogen. An analysis of shoot Cu content conducted in 19 plant species found in sites with highest soil Cu contents (.250 mg kg21) showed high levels of Cu in their shoots (.100 mg kg21). These results demonstrate species or ecotypes with optimal distribution in soils with high Cu contents, such as Armeria maritima, Trisetum lasiolepis, and Montiopsis potentilloides, which may have tolerance to this metal.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Anic, Vinka
Díaz Forester, Javiera
Bustamante, Elena
Fuente, Luz María de la
Casale, Jean Francois
Harpe, Jean Paul de la
Montenegro, Gloria
Ginocchio, Rosanna
author_facet Anic, Vinka
Díaz Forester, Javiera
Bustamante, Elena
Fuente, Luz María de la
Casale, Jean Francois
Harpe, Jean Paul de la
Montenegro, Gloria
Ginocchio, Rosanna
author_sort Anic, Vinka
title Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
title_short Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
title_full Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
title_fullStr Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Soil Chemical Variables and Altitude on the Distribution of High-alpine Plants: the Case of the Andes of Central Chile
title_sort influence of soil chemical variables and altitude on the distribution of high-alpine plants: the case of the andes of central chile
publisher INST ARCTIC ALPINE RES, UNIV COLORADO
publishDate 2010
url http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/14749
long_lat ENVELOPE(-38.550,-38.550,65.617,65.617)
geographic Isi
geographic_facet Isi
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
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