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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2018, Vol. 29 ›› Issue (12): 3917-3926.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.201812.001

• Research paper • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Niche of main woody plant populations of Pterocarya stenoptera community in riparian zone of Lijiang River, China

LIU Run-hong, CHANG Bin, RONG Chun-yan, JIANG Yong*, YANG Rui-an, LIU Xing-tong, ZENG Hui-fang, FU Gui-huan   

  1. Key Laboratory of Ecology of Rare and Endangered Species and Environmental Protection, Ministry of Education/College of Life Science, Guangxi Normal University, Guilin 541006, Guangxi, China
  • Received:2018-02-24 Revised:2018-06-29 Online:2018-12-20 Published:2018-12-20
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by the National Science and Technology Pillar Program during the Twelfth Five-year Plan Period of China (2012BAC16B03), the Innovation Project of Guangxi Graduate Education (YCSW2017079), and the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Program of Guangxi Autonomous Region College Students of 2017 (201710602236, 201710602247).

Abstract: To understand the niche characteristics of main woody species in Pterocarya stenoptera community, we investigated P. stenoptera communities in riparian zone of Lijiang River, China. The niche characteristics of main species in tree layers and shrub layers were quantified with the indices of Levins niche breadth, Shannon niche breadth, Schoener niche similarities and Pianka niche overlap. The results showed that P. stenoptera in the tree layer, and Ficus abelii and Morus alba in the shrub layer had higher niche breadth than other species. The species with larger importance values generally had larger niche breadth, but the rank orders of which were not exactly the same. The niche similarity of main populations in the tree layer was generally smaller than that in the shrub layer. The mean value of niche similarity of main populations in the tree layer and shrub layer was 0.151 and 0.236, respectively. There was a low degree of niche similarity among species within the community, indicating that they had a low similarity in resource use. The niche overlap of main populations in the tree layer was generally smaller than that in the shrub layer, with the mean value of niche overlap of main populations in the tree layer and shrub layer being 0.217 and 0.273, respectively. The niche overlap between the main species in the community was relatively lower. There was no significant correlation between niche breadth and niche similarity. The species with larger niche breadth often had more opportunities to overlap with other species. However, their overlap value was not necessarily larger. Larger niche similarity was often associated with higher degrees of niche overlap. The P. stenoptera community in riparian zone of Lijiang River was the climax community, the relationship among species was relatively stable, the population regeneration was very slow, and the development trend of this community was declining in the future.