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Habitat factor analysis for Torreya grandis cv. Merrillii based on spatial information technology.

WANG Xiao-ming1,2,3;WANG Ke1,2;AO Wei-jiu1,2;DENG Jin-song1,2;HAN Ning1,2;ZHU Xiao-yun1,2   

  1. 1Institute of Remote Sensing & Information System Application, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, China;2Zhejiang Provincal Key Laboratory of
    Agricultural Remote Sensing and Information System Application, Hangzhou 310029 ,China; 3Research Institute of Subtropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Hangzhou 310029, China
  • Received:2008-04-10 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2008-11-20 Published:2008-11-20

Abstract: Torreya grandis cv. Merrillii, a tertiary survival plant, is a rare tree species of significant economic value and expands rapidly in China. Its special habitat factor analysis has the potential value to provide guide information for its planting, management, and sustainable development, because the suitable growth conditions for this tree species are special and strict. In this paper, the special habitat factors for T. grandis cv. Merrillii in its core region, i.e., in seven villages of Zhuji City, Zhejiang Province were analyzed with Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and a series of data, such as IKONOS image, Digital Elevation Model (DEM), and field survey data supported by the spatial information technology. The results showed that T. grandis cv. Merrillii exhibited high selectivity of environmental factors such as elevation, slope, and aspect. 96.22% of T. grandis cv. Merrillii trees were located at the elevation from 300 to 600 m, 97.52% of them were found to present on the areas whose slope was less than 30°, and 74.43% of them distributed on sunny and half-sunny slopes. The results of PCA analysis indicated that the main environmental factors affecting the habitat of T. grandis cv. Merrillii were moisture, heat, and soil nutrients, and moisture might be one of the most important ecological factors for T. grandis cv. Merrillii due to the unique biological and ecological characteristics of the tree species.

Key words: Scenedesmus obliquus, bacterial flora in phycosphere, algal-bacterial symbiosis, oil accumulation