Assessing potential habitats and populations of selected medicinal herbs in Alpine areas of Uttarakhand, Western Himalaya
-
Published:2023-03-10
Issue:3
Volume:45
Page:144-155
-
ISSN:0971-9431
-
Container-title:Indian Journal of Forestry
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Indian J. Forest.
Author:
Chandra Naveen1, Rai Ishwari2ORCID, Mishra Arun3ORCID, Dwivedi Sanjay2, Kotiya Amit4ORCID, Tiwari Umesh5, Singh Gajendra1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Uttarakhand Space Application Centre 2. Indian Institute of Remote Sensing 3. Wildlife Institute of India 4. University of Rajasthan 5. Botanical Survey of India
Abstract
We assessed the areas under suitable habitats and population of ten high value medicinal herbs in alpine region of Uttarakhand, Western Himalaya. Topographic, landcover, physiographic, edaphic and bioclimatic variables were used to predict the potential distribution of these plants in the alpine vegetation zone. Field surveys were conducted to collect occurrence data, and the abundance of species was assessed through rapid mapping exercises. The study found that certain habitat types, particularly Danthonia-dominated grassy slopes, herbaceous meadows, and shrubberies between 3000-4100 m elevations on specific slopes, were preferred by the MAPs. Among the threatened MAPs, Allium stracheyi had the largest potential distribution area (588 km2) with a moderate abundance of 1.7 individuals/m2, while Aconitum balfourii had the smallest potential distribution area (100 km2) with low abundance (0.2 individuals/m2). The results of the MaxEnt analysis identified several significant contributing factors for the potential distribution of threatened species, including aspect, slope, vegetation type, mean diurnal temperature, and precipitation during the wettest months. Based on the potential distribution and abundance data, specific meadows such as Valley of Flowers, Kandara, Ralam, Milam, Tungnath, Panchachuli, and Pindari were identified as priorities for in-situ conservation and management efforts.
Publisher
Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh
Reference50 articles.
1. Adhikari, D., Barik, S.K. and Upadhaya, K., 2012. Habitat distribution modelling for reintroduction of Ilex khasiana Purk., a critically endangered tree species of northeastern India. Ecological Engineering, 40, pp.37-43. 2. Airi, S., 1997. Population studies on Podophyllum hexandrum Royle- A dwindling, medicinal plant of the Himalaya. Plant Genetic Resource Newsletter, 110, pp.29-34. 3. Bachman, S.P., Nic Lughadha, E.M. and Rivers, M.C., 2018. Quantifying progress toward a conservation assessment for all plants. Conservation Biology, 32(3), pp.516-524. 4. Banerjee, A., Devi, M., Nag, A., Sharma, R.K and Kumar, A., 2017. Modelling probable distribution of Podophyllum hexandrum in North-Western Himalaya. Indian Forester, 143(12), pp.1255-1259. 5. Barik, S.K., Tiwari, O.N., Adhikari, D., Singh, P.P., Tiwary, R. and Barua, S., 2018 Geographic dis-tribution pattern of threatened plants of India and step taken for their conservation. Current Science, 114(3), pp.470-503.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|