%A Cindy Q. Tang, Yongchuan Yang, Arata Momohara, Huan-Chong Wang, Hong Truong Luu, Shuaifeng Li, Kun Song, Shenhua Qian, Ben LePage, Yi-Fei Dong, Peng-Bin Han, Masahiko Ohsawa, Buu Thach Le, Huu Dang Tran, Minh Tri Dang, Ming-Chun Peng, Chong-Yun Wang %T Forest characteristics and population structure of Glyptostrobus pensilis, a globally endangered relict species of southeastern China %0 Journal Article %D 2019 %J Plant Diversity %R 10.1016/j.pld.2019.06.007 %P 237-249 %V 41 %N 04 %U {https://journal.kib.ac.cn/CN/abstract/article_60143.shtml} %8 %X The Chinese water pine Glyptostrobus pensilis is the sole surviving species of the genus Glyptostrobus. It is endemic to southern China, central Vietnam, and eastern Laos, and today it is nearly extinct in the wild. Forest community characteristics and population structure of G. pensilis in China have remained unknown up to now. We investigated six swamp forest stands and analyzed their forest community characteristics (i.e. vertical stratification, species composition, and diversity) and population structure, including the frequency distribution of DBH (diameter at breast height) and age-classes as found in Fujian Province, southeastern China.
The vertical stratifications of all the forest stands were rather simple. The remaining wild specimens ranged from roughly 15 to some 357 years for an average of ca. 85 years, with only a few individuals less than 20 years old. Compared with the stands and populations of G. pensilis in Vietnam, the taxonomic compositions of the stands in the two regions were different, except for the dominant species-G. pensilis. The ShannoneWiener index showed the overstory of each stand had much lower diversity (0.26 on average) in Fujian Province than that (1.97 on average) in Vietnam, whereas the diversity indices were about the same (around 2.41) for the understories in the two regions. Furthermore, we discovered 18 G. pensilis seedlings at the study sites in Fujian Province. This discovery demonstrates that G. pensilis regeneration is extremely poor and its populations are declining, although these populations are relatively healthier than those in Vietnam.