Ecological behavior of Quercus suber and Quercus ilex inferred by topographic wetness index (TWI)

TitleEcological behavior of Quercus suber and Quercus ilex inferred by topographic wetness index (TWI)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsPetroselli, A., Vessella F., Cavagnuolo L., Piovesan G., & Schirone B.
JournalTrees
Volume27
Pagination1201-1215
KeywordsEcological gradients, Forest ecology, Quercus ilex, Quercus suber, Terrain analysis, Topographic wetness index
Abstract

The ecological behaviors of a network of pure evergreen oak stands (Quercus suber L. and Quercus ilex L.) in the Central-Western Mediterranean Basin were investigated toward climatic and edaphic factors implemented with the application of topographic wetness index (TWI). A Categorical Principal Component Analysis (Catpca) using climatic and soil physico-chemical parameters was performed on 23 cork oak and holm oak pure stands with the aim to understand better the effectiveness of TWI for characterizing soil ecology of the two species. Catpca pointed out that, although cork oak and holm oak are able to growth in similar Mediterranean conditions, they show different behaviors in terms of needs and tolerance to soil water content. TWI confirmed such results at local scale, allowing highlighting some interesting features of the species differential ecology. Although both species confirmed to be drought-tolerant, the heliophilous cork oak revealed to dominate the landscape on wettest soils with high TWI values-indicating the capacity to tolerate stresses due to periods of waterlogging-, while the shade-tolerant holm oak prevails for low-medium TWI values-drier and mesophilous sites. Despite the application of TWI to vegetation science and ecology is relatively recent, results are encouraging and suggest considering this user-friendly and synthetic index in ecological investigations and modeling.