Richness, Diversity and Evenness of Vegetation upon Rehabilitation of Gypsunm Mine Spoiled Lands in the Indian Arid Zone
130 / 60
Abstract
Richness, diversity and evenness of vegetation, after rehabilitation of gypsum mine spoils at Barmer were investigated in plots protected and planted one year and four years ago. There were four water harvesting treatments, viz., half-moon terraces, micro-catchments with 5% slope, ridge and furrow and control, wherein. indigenous and exotic trees and shrubs were planted at 5 x 5 m spacing. Sampling of the planted and natural vegetation, using quadrats and transacts, revealed much less species richness in unplanted control as compared to all treatments and in all the years. The species richness that increased initially (within one year) gradually declined over time (during four year), though the extent varied in different treatments. The water harvesting treannent showing maximum initial increase in richness also showed maximum decline over time, though decline was more in annual species. Two perennial species increased in richness with time. This was further proved from the trends in diversity and evenness indices. It was concluded that natural successional process was accelerated by rehabilitation providing stability to the habitat.Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Downloads
Submitted
14-12-2016
Published
17-12-2016
Issue
Section
Articles
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Arid Zone Research Association of India

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
Kumar, S., Sharma, K. D., Sharma, B. K., & Gough, L. P. (2016). Richness, Diversity and Evenness of Vegetation upon Rehabilitation of Gypsunm Mine Spoiled Lands in the Indian Arid Zone. Annals of Arid Zone, 37(2). https://doi.org/10.56093/aaz.v37i2.65481






