Diversity of vascular epiphytes on preferred shade trees in tea gardens of sub-Himalayan tracts in West Bengal, India
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11609/jott.8660.16.8.25720-25729Keywords:
Diameter at breast height, Orchidaceae, Shannon-Weiner index, vascular epiphytic assemblages, vertical distribution, zonation patternAbstract
Tea gardens are the main economic backbone of the Terai & Dooars region and intermingle with forest areas of northern Bengal in India. The study aims to explore the vascular epiphytic diversity and their zone-wise assemblage pattern on 10 dominant shade trees in the tea gardens. Four years (March 2018–September 2022) of surveys recorded a total of 6,704 individuals that belong to 74 species of 20 families of vascular epiphytes. Considering life forms, the majority of them are holoepiphytes (62.16%), followed by hemiepiphytes (20.27%), accidental epiphytes (13.51%), and facultative epiphytes (2.7%). The predominantly recorded families are Orchidaceae (21 spp.), Araceae (11 spp.), Apocyanaceae with six species, and Piperaceae & Pteridaceae with three species each. Albizia lebbeck (L.) Benth. hosts a maximum of 737 vascular epiphytic assemblages (VEAs), whereas, Gmelina arborea Roxb. has a minimum of 450 VEAs. Vascular epiphytes were also studied for their host specificity using interpolation and extrapolation analyses. The findings of the study show that vascular epiphytic assemblage upon the shade trees of the tea garden has a remarkably high potential to contribute toward epiphytic diversity of this region other than forest and contribute significant ecological impacts.
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