首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      

Alpine Ecosystems of Northwest Yunnan, China: an Initial Assessment for Conservation
作者姓名:Ruth  Sherman  Renee  Mullen  LI  Haomin  FANG  Zhendong  WANG  Yi
作者单位:Department of Natural Resources Cornell University,The Nature Conservancy,Ithaca,NY 14853,USA,Boise,ID,83702 USA
摘    要:Implementing conservation actions on-the-ground is not a straightforward process,especially when faced with high scientific uncertainty due to limited available information. This is especially acute in regions of the world that harbor many unique species that have not been well studied,such as the alpine zone of the Hengduan Mountains of Northwest Yunnan (NWY),a global biodiversity hotspot and site of The Nature Conservancy’s Yunnan Great Rivers Project. We conducted a quantitative,but rapid regional-level assessment of the alpine flora across NWY to provide a broad-based understanding of local and regional patterns of the alpine flora,the first large-scale analysis of alpine biodiversity patterns in this region. Multivariate analyses were used to classify the major plant community types and link community patterns to habitat variables. Our analysis indicated that most species had small distributions and/or small population sizes. Strong patterns emerged with higher diversity in the more northern mountains,but beta diversity was high,averaging only 10% among sites. The ordinations indicated that elevation and geographic location were the dominant environ-mental gradients underlying the differences in the species composition among communities. The high beta diversity across the alpine of these mountains implies that conservation strategies ultimately will require the protection of large numbers of species over a large geographical area. However,prioritiza-tion should be given to areas where potential payoffs are greatest. Sites with high species richness also have a greater number of endemic species,and,by focusing efforts on these sites,conservation investments would be maximized by protecting the greatest number of unique species.

关 键 词:高山生态系统  中国  云南  植物种群生态学
修稿时间:2007-06-05

Alpine ecosystems of northwest Yunnan, China: an initial assessment for conservation
Ruth Sherman Renee Mullen LI Haomin FANG Zhendong WANG Yi.Alpine ecosystems of northwest Yunnan, China: an initial assessment for conservation[J].Journal of Mountain Science,2007,4(3):181-192.
Authors:Ruth Sherman  Renee Mullen  Haomin Li  Zhendong Fang  Yi Wang
Institution:(1) Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA;(2) The Nature Conservancy, Boise, ID 83702, USA;(3) The Nature Conservancy, China Program, Kunming, Yunnan, PRC;(4) Shangri-la Alpine Botanical Institute, Zhongdian, Yunnan, PRC;(5) State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, The Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, PRC
Abstract:Implementing conservation actions on-the-ground is not a straightforward process, especially when faced with high scientific uncertainty due to limited available information. This is especially acute in regions of the world that harbor many unique species that have not been well studied, such as the alpine zone of the Hengduan Mountains of Northwest Yunnan (NWY), a global biodiversity hotspot and site of The Nature Conservancy’s Yunnan Great Rivers Project. We conducted a quantitative, but rapid regional-level assessment of the alpine flora across NWY to provide a broad-based understanding of local and regional patterns of the alpine flora, the first large-scale analysis of alpine biodiversity patterns in this region. Multivariate analyses were used to classify the major plant community types and link community patterns to habitat variables. Our analysis indicated that most species had small distributions and/or small population sizes. Strong patterns emerged with higher diversity in the more northern mountains, but beta diversity was high, averaging only 10% among sites. The ordinations indicated that elevation and geographic location were the dominant environ-mental gradients underlying the differences in the species composition among communities. The high beta diversity across the alpine of these mountains implies that conservation strategies ultimately will require the protection of large numbers of species over a large geographical area. However, prioritization should be given to areas where potential payoffs are greatest. Sites with high species richness also have a greater number of endemic species, and, by focusing efforts on these sites, conservation investments would be maximized by protecting the greatest number of unique species.
Keywords:Biodiversity hotspot  cluster analysis  plant community ecology  conservation action  grazing  Hengduan Mountains  non-metric multidimensional scaling  plant species richness  World Heritage Site  Yunnan Great Rivers Project(YGRY)  alpine ecosystems  China
本文献已被 CNKI 维普 万方数据 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号