Vegetation in an altitudinal gradient along the Rio Loa in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile

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Date
1998
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Abstract
Six sites between 0 m and 4000 m were sampled for plant and soil chemical characteristics along the Rio Loa, Atacama Desert, Chile. Sites located between 0 m and 1500 m showed lower species richness, higher plant cover and higher herbaceous productivity than the upper part of the altitudinal gradient. The number of species varied non-linerly with precipitation along the altitudinal gradient. Plant cover and herbaceous productivity in the lowlands is characterized by the Pluchea absinthioides-Distichlis spicata association of anthropic origin. We propose that vegetation structure along the altitudinal gradient has been affected by past and present human activities, and climatic and edaphic factors. (C) 1998 Academic Press.
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Keywords
Atacama Desert, Rio Loa, altitudinal gradient, vegetation, human-driven system
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