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Comparison of mangrove stand development on accretion and erosion sites in Ca Mau, Vietnam

Nguyen L.T.M. Department of Forest Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul, 08826, South Korea|
Park P.S. | Van Ta H. South Western Forest Research and Experimental Center, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Ca Mau, 98000, Viet Nam| Hoang H.T. Research Institute for Forest Ecology and Environment, Vietnamese Academy of Forest Sciences, Hanoi, 100000, Viet Nam|

Forests Số 6, năm 2020 (Tập 11, trang -)

DOI: 10.3390/F11060615

Tài liệu thuộc danh mục: ISI, Scopus

English

Từ khóa: Hierarchical clustering; Reforestation; Structure (composition); Increasing trees; Mangrove forest; Mangrove species; Restoration strategies; Species composition; Stand development; Stand structures; Structural characteristics; Erosion; accretion; community composition; community structure; comparative study; erosion; forest ecosystem; mangrove; regeneration; Deposition; Development; Erosion; Mangrove; Reforestation; Sites; Trees; Vietnam; Ca Mau; Viet Nam; Avicennia alba; Rhizophora apiculata; Rhizophoraceae
Tóm tắt tiếng anh
Mangroves are adapted to coastal processes; however, mangrove species showed various responses to estuarian environments, leading to different structural characteristics at accretion and erosion areas. The species composition, structure and regeneration of mangrove forests were investigated to provide insight into mangrove forest development in response to shoreline accretion and erosion processes. The species composition and stand structure of mangrove forests were measured along the distance from the shoreline at accretion and erosion sites in Ca Mau, Vietnam. The hierarchical clustering of grouped stands based on species composition and tree size distribution was conducted. Grouped mangrove stands showed landward changes in species composition and stand structure from the shoreline (p < 0.05), reflecting the timescale of accretion or erosion at both accretion and erosion sites. Stand development patterns differed between accretion and erosion sites, and Avicennia alba and Rhizophora apiculata dominated seaward plots at accretion and erosion sites, respectively. Newer accredited sites were dominated by A. alba. Mangrove stands developed from dense A. alba dominant to R. apiculata dominant stands with increasing tree size at accretion sites. There were more species-colonized sites with a higher erosion rate or that were more recently eroded, implying that timescale of erosion and erosion rate affected species composition and regeneration on erosion sites. Accretion and erosion affected stand development of mangroves differently, implying that conservation and restoration strategies should be applied differently to accretion and erosion sites. � 2020 by the authors.

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