Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia

This study aimed to provide an insight into the current status of the Nepenthes community on Mount Trus Madi and the implications to their conservation. Ten 0.01 ha Nepenthes plots were established along the Kaingaran summit trail. A total of five Nepenthes taxa were identified, namely the Nepenthes...

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Main Author: Alviana Damit
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/1/24%20PAGES.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/2/FULLTEXT.pdf
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Institution: Universiti Malaysia Sabah
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spelling my.ums.eprints.405192024-09-24T04:20:46Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/ Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia Alviana Damit QK494-494.5 Gymnosperms This study aimed to provide an insight into the current status of the Nepenthes community on Mount Trus Madi and the implications to their conservation. Ten 0.01 ha Nepenthes plots were established along the Kaingaran summit trail. A total of five Nepenthes taxa were identified, namely the Nepenthes tentaculata, N. zakriana, N. macrophylla, N. lowii and natural hybrid N. x trusmadiensis. The most abundant species was N. tentaculata with number of individuals was more than 75% from the total number of individuals of all species. In contrast, the other four taxa have a smaller distribution and less abundant along the Kaingaran trail. All species have significantly aggregated population dispersion pattern indicating that they grow in grouped and tend to survive best in particular favourable patches. Population structure of N. tentaculata showed higher number of seedlings compared to juveniles and mature individuals, indicating that its population is healthy, stable and growing. Meanwhile, the N. lowii, N macrophylla and N. x trusmadiensis showed lower number of seedlings and juveniles that may suggesting the inability of their seeds to germinate or the seedlings and saplings to survive and grow, that may lead to uncertain regeneration. By using Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE) approach, it was found that there was a significant reduction of the abundance of N. macrophylla between year 2016 and 2017, suggesting it was potentially at risk of population declined. Trail impact assessment was conducted using the Generalized Linear Models (GLM) to assess the effects of the trail on the abundance and mortality of the Nepenthes plants at different distances from the trail. The abundances of Nepenthes were significantly higher along the trail than further away while their mortalities were significantly highest at the zones that furthest from the trail. Their seedling individuals that were located at furthest from the trail, were also more likely to die compared to their seedlings adjacent to the trail. Evidently, the Nepenthes plants in this study were preferred to grow and survived the best along the trail, where the forest gap was wider, light intensity was higher and less competition with other plants, compared to the area furthest from the trail. Correlation analysis Spearman rank correlation coefficients was used to identify the relationship between the density of Nepenthes and the changes in stand structures and other factors along the elevation profile. The density of N. lowii was significantly correlated to the vegetation type and mean tree height where they were only grow well on summit scrub vegetation which have shorter trees. Meanwhile, the density of N. macrophylla was significantly correlated with the total tree basal area and altitude where they were restricted to elevation above 2,500 m and was more abundant on vegetation with lower tree basal areas. These indicate that both N. lowii and N. macrophylla species displayed a very narrow habitat specificity compare to the other Nepenthes species. The data and findings from this study are valuable as baseline data for future study comparison and thereafter will enable further effective conservation management and monitoring plans on Nepenthes community in Mount Trus Madi. 2019 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/1/24%20PAGES.pdf text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/2/FULLTEXT.pdf Alviana Damit (2019) Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia. Masters thesis, Universiti Malaysia Sabah.
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
language English
English
topic QK494-494.5 Gymnosperms
spellingShingle QK494-494.5 Gymnosperms
Alviana Damit
Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
description This study aimed to provide an insight into the current status of the Nepenthes community on Mount Trus Madi and the implications to their conservation. Ten 0.01 ha Nepenthes plots were established along the Kaingaran summit trail. A total of five Nepenthes taxa were identified, namely the Nepenthes tentaculata, N. zakriana, N. macrophylla, N. lowii and natural hybrid N. x trusmadiensis. The most abundant species was N. tentaculata with number of individuals was more than 75% from the total number of individuals of all species. In contrast, the other four taxa have a smaller distribution and less abundant along the Kaingaran trail. All species have significantly aggregated population dispersion pattern indicating that they grow in grouped and tend to survive best in particular favourable patches. Population structure of N. tentaculata showed higher number of seedlings compared to juveniles and mature individuals, indicating that its population is healthy, stable and growing. Meanwhile, the N. lowii, N macrophylla and N. x trusmadiensis showed lower number of seedlings and juveniles that may suggesting the inability of their seeds to germinate or the seedlings and saplings to survive and grow, that may lead to uncertain regeneration. By using Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE) approach, it was found that there was a significant reduction of the abundance of N. macrophylla between year 2016 and 2017, suggesting it was potentially at risk of population declined. Trail impact assessment was conducted using the Generalized Linear Models (GLM) to assess the effects of the trail on the abundance and mortality of the Nepenthes plants at different distances from the trail. The abundances of Nepenthes were significantly higher along the trail than further away while their mortalities were significantly highest at the zones that furthest from the trail. Their seedling individuals that were located at furthest from the trail, were also more likely to die compared to their seedlings adjacent to the trail. Evidently, the Nepenthes plants in this study were preferred to grow and survived the best along the trail, where the forest gap was wider, light intensity was higher and less competition with other plants, compared to the area furthest from the trail. Correlation analysis Spearman rank correlation coefficients was used to identify the relationship between the density of Nepenthes and the changes in stand structures and other factors along the elevation profile. The density of N. lowii was significantly correlated to the vegetation type and mean tree height where they were only grow well on summit scrub vegetation which have shorter trees. Meanwhile, the density of N. macrophylla was significantly correlated with the total tree basal area and altitude where they were restricted to elevation above 2,500 m and was more abundant on vegetation with lower tree basal areas. These indicate that both N. lowii and N. macrophylla species displayed a very narrow habitat specificity compare to the other Nepenthes species. The data and findings from this study are valuable as baseline data for future study comparison and thereafter will enable further effective conservation management and monitoring plans on Nepenthes community in Mount Trus Madi.
format Thesis
author Alviana Damit
author_facet Alviana Damit
author_sort Alviana Damit
title Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
title_short Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
title_full Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
title_fullStr Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Ecological studies on the nepenthes species along Kaingaran Trail of Mount Trus Madi, Sabah, Malaysia
title_sort ecological studies on the nepenthes species along kaingaran trail of mount trus madi, sabah, malaysia
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/1/24%20PAGES.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/2/FULLTEXT.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/40519/
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