Floristics and Phytogeographic Study of the Dodola Forest (Ethiopia) (Paperback)


Deforestation rate in Ethiopia is estimated to be 150,000 to 200,000 ha/annum. Because of this a considerable area of what was once a closed forest had been converted to a heavily disturbed forest. The chief reasons for reduction of the forest are uncontrolled exploitation, forest fires and the expansion of permanently cultivated areas. In order to maintain the ecological equilibrium and to meet the forest resources requirement of the population, scientific information is the basis. The Dodola forest is one of the few remaining dry Afromontane coniferous forests Ethiopia. It is dominated by Juniperus procera, Podocarpus falcatus and Maytenus addat at altitudes below 2800 m. Areas above 3200 m are dominated by Erica arborea. Juniperus procera is the most dominant species in the forest. Phytogeographically this forest is more related to the dry Afromontane forests of the central plateau of Shewa than to the moist Afromontane forests of Harenna and South West Ethiopia. This analysis may serve as a basis for foresters, plant ecologists as a reference material and for the forest managers as an input indevising the management plan of the forest.

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Product Description

Deforestation rate in Ethiopia is estimated to be 150,000 to 200,000 ha/annum. Because of this a considerable area of what was once a closed forest had been converted to a heavily disturbed forest. The chief reasons for reduction of the forest are uncontrolled exploitation, forest fires and the expansion of permanently cultivated areas. In order to maintain the ecological equilibrium and to meet the forest resources requirement of the population, scientific information is the basis. The Dodola forest is one of the few remaining dry Afromontane coniferous forests Ethiopia. It is dominated by Juniperus procera, Podocarpus falcatus and Maytenus addat at altitudes below 2800 m. Areas above 3200 m are dominated by Erica arborea. Juniperus procera is the most dominant species in the forest. Phytogeographically this forest is more related to the dry Afromontane forests of the central plateau of Shewa than to the moist Afromontane forests of Harenna and South West Ethiopia. This analysis may serve as a basis for foresters, plant ecologists as a reference material and for the forest managers as an input indevising the management plan of the forest.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Lap Lambert Academic Publishing

Country of origin

Germany

Release date

April 2011

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

April 2011

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 4mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

64

ISBN-13

978-3-8443-2628-4

Barcode

9783844326284

Categories

LSN

3-8443-2628-6



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