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The wetland flora of South Africa: Occurrence patterns, frequency and dominance across a diverse landscape

•A list of wetland plants for South Africa has been generated by means of an extensive vegetation survey as well as an extensive herbarium search.•The occurrence as well as the average cover-anundance of certain plant families has been determined and linked to environmental variables in South Africa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquatic botany 2017-09, Vol.142, p.112-118
Main Authors: Sieben, E.J.J., Glen, R.P., Muasya, A.M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•A list of wetland plants for South Africa has been generated by means of an extensive vegetation survey as well as an extensive herbarium search.•The occurrence as well as the average cover-anundance of certain plant families has been determined and linked to environmental variables in South African wetlands.•Four main elements in the wetland flora of South Africa can be determined and each of these are linked to specific habitats.•The four elements, saline pans, aquatic environmenta, marshlands and nutrient-poor peatlands are each characterized by the occurrence of specific groups of families. A survey of vascular plant species occurring in various wetland habitats in South Africa has been generated by supplementing the species list from a vegetation survey with a herbarium checklist and this list of wetland species is compared with the overall flora of South Africa. About 18.8% of all the South African species occur in wetlands and about 4.5% of all species are obligate wetland species, in the sense that they will not be found outside of the wetland environment. These fractions are compared with the fractions calculated per family and this indicates which families are over- or underrepresented in the South Africa wetland flora. Most of the families that are well represented in wetlands are in the monocots and particularly in the Poales, but wetlands in the Fynbos Biome are much more phylogenetically diverse. There are four main wetland assemblages that can be defined by their family composition and that are characteristic of specific wetland environments. These can generally be described as the environments that are permanently submerged, the environments that are permanently to intermittently inundated, the environments of inland saline pans and environments on extremely nutrient-poor substrates consisting of coastal sands, quartzites or peat.
ISSN:0304-3770
1879-1522
DOI:10.1016/j.aquabot.2017.03.003