A quantitative and qualitative study of the indigenous forests of the southwestern Cape
Thesis / Dissertation
1978
Permanent link to this Item
Authors
Journal Title
Link to Journal
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher
Department
Faculty
License
Series
Abstract
[page 80 missing] The vegetation of the south-western corner of South Africa is dominated by low sclerophyllous shrubland and is largely lacking in trees (Taylor, 1978). Forest is moreor-less restricted to sheltered valleys, southern slopes and rock screes (Campbell and Moll, 1977; Taylor, 1978). Early botanists referred to the forests as containing 'tropical' species in contrast to the temperate Cape flora (Acocks, 1953; Phillips, 1931). However, White (1978) showed that these forests were overwhelmingly afromontane in species composition; an effect of increasing latitude compensating for altitude in this region.
Description
Keywords
Reference:
McKenzie, B. 1978. A quantitative and qualitative study of the indigenous forests of the southwestern Cape. . ,Faculty of Science ,Department of Biological Sciences. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40459