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Diversity and density of plant species from differently degraded areas of caatinga at the Floresta municipality, Pernambuco, Brazil

ABSTRACT

Floristic and structural patterns related to anthropic degradation of the caatinga were identified based on the selection of plant communities in three situations: degraded, moderately degraded, and non-degraded. Plants were sampled from three vertical strata: upper woody (height ≥ 3 m), lower woody (50 cm ≤ height < 3 m), and regeneration (height < 50 cm). Richness, density, and diversity were estimated, and speciesdensity and species-area curves were analyzed. A decrease in the number of species was one of the effects of degradation: among the stratum of the lower woody plants, the number was three in the degraded area and 10 in the non-degraded area. Diversity and density were also lower in the degraded area (0.56 and 2,328 ind/ha) compared to the non-degraded area (1.32 and 26,557 ind/ha). Malvastrum coromandellianum dominated the lower woody stratum in the degraded area, while Cordia leucocephala and Croton mucronifolius were dominant in non-degraded area. Influence from degradation was not detected in the regeneration stratum, except for the smaller number of species in the degraded environment that was estimated by the species-area model.

Key words:
desertification; species diversity; species-area curve; vertical strata; Northeast

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