Reprint

Biodiversity of Vegetation and Flora in Tropical Africa

Edited by
December 2020
180 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03943-531-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03943-532-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Biodiversity of Vegetation and Flora in Tropical Africa that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary
African ecosystems comprise a wealthy repository of biodiversity, with a high proportion of native and endemic plant species, which makes them biologically unique and providers of a wide range of ecosystem services. A large part of African populations, in both rural and urban areas, depend on plants for their survival and welfare, but many ecosystems are being degraded, mostly due to the growing impacts of climate change and other anthropogenic actions and environmental problems. Loss of habitat and biodiversity affects livelihoods, water supply and food security and reduces the resilience of ecosystems in the African continent. The knowledge about the great African plant and ecosystem diversity, and the structure, composition and processes involved in vegetation dynamics, is crucial to promote their sustainable use and to preserve one of the most understudied regions in the world. This Special Issue aimed to gather contributions that update and improve such knowledge.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2021 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
ecotone; fire; forest core; habitat preference; Ngel Nyaki; niche partitioning; savannah; species sorting; torus translation; vegetation; aridification in NW Africa; Macaronesian islands; distribution patterns; West African Monsoon (WAM); vascular flora; African potato; conservation; commercialization; cultivation; Hypoxidaceae; medicinal plant; unsustainable harvesting; wild harvesting; woodland; miombo; savanna; diversity; disturbance; Baikiaea; biogeographic vicariance; extinction; phylogenomics; gene shopping; gene capture; molecular dating; Africa; biome; RADseq; Monechma; Justicia; phylogeny; plant diversity; Bia Tano Forest Reserve; conservation; gap; regeneration; species composition; species diversity; wildfires; MODIS burnt area product; WWF ecoregions; land cover; Miombo woodlands; biodiversity conservation; sub-Saharan Africa; flora; vegetation; Africa; tropical biodiversity