SP in Ecology
SP in Ecology
SP in Ecology
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I. INTRODUCTION
Background Information
Biodiversity of forest resource can support the lives of people where they depend
Trees are important part of the terrestrial ecosystem (Lowman, 2009) providing
essential habitat for a community of organisms. Leaves, flowers and fruits are seasonally
available. Trees stabilize the soil, help prevent desertification and have a major role in
(Bellefontaine, 2002). Flowering trees are mostly used for timber purposes, but in the
present article the utility of trees with respect to their importance in restoring, reclaiming
and rejuvenating denuded and disturbed soils, their ecological, ecodevelopmental and
environmental use, and their educational and recreational value in gardening, landscaping
and bioesthetic planning is described. In addition, the importance of trees is discussed with
reference to their value as a source of sustenance: food, sugars, starches, spices and
fatty oils and vegetable fats, waxes, soap substitutes, vegetable ivory, fodder, fuel,
bioenergy or biofuel, fertilizers, fiber, pulp and paper, tannins, dyes, rubber and other latex
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However, human pressure on plant resources has led to the depletion of these
including plants, and the international nature of actions required to address the threats, as
well as the need to operationalize the principles of sustainable development in all countries
According to the Framework for Philippine Plant Conservation Strategy and Action
Plan, the Philippine flora is composed of at least 14000 species, representing five percent
of the world’s flora. There are about 8000+ species of flowering plants or angiosperms, 33
of bryophytes, more than 3555+ species of fungi and molds, about 1355+ species of algae
(DENR-UNEP 1997; Villareal & Fernando 1999), and 790 species of lichens (Gruezo
1979).
of the grandest waterfalls located in Aurora known as Ditumabo Falls (also known as
Mother Falls) was no known record of its plant diversity. The Ditumabo Falls stands at the
height of 140 feet. Its cold water gushes off from the highlands of Sierra Madre Mountain
Range, freefalling into a wide rocky basin which serves as an ideal pool for swimming.
Generally, the study aimed to determine the diversity of flowering trees in particular
trees;
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2. Provide information on the abundance and occurrence of trees.
The study provides information and serves as a guide on the different species of
flowering trees that was found in different areas in Ditumabo Mother Falls in Brgy,
Ditumabo, Baler, Aurora. This study provides how diverse the species of flowering trees
which attributes to the environmental condition of the Ditumabo Mother Falls which is
This study was limited only to the 5 locations that were selected as the study site.
The study was conducted from April 2019 to May 2019 at Ditumabo Mother Falls
in Brgy, Ditumabo, Baler, Aurora. Five stations were randomly selected for the study.
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II. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
Diversity
The expansion of crop and pastoral land into semi-natural ecosystems is currently
the most prevalent form of land use change; it usually involves deforestation and or forest
Tree species diversity may or may not reflect the diversity of plant forms, but might
serve well as a preliminary indicator. The simple number of tree species is only one way
of looking at diversity. The idea of species richness has to do with how dominant a few
species are. Species richness is a relative term that refers to the number of species in a
community, and is directly associated with measuring the diversity of species in a given
area. A related term, evenness, is another dimension of diversity that defines the number
of individuals from each species in the same area. Together, these terms have been used to
Diversity Measurements
Diversity is measured for three main reasons: (1) to measure stability to determine
eliminate the need for extensive lists. Diversity indices provide important information
about the composition of a community and about species rarity and commonness in a
"nonconcept" and that theoretic results are not dependable. His view is that ecologists
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should abandon the "poorly defined" idea of diversity completely, as well as diversity
indices, and rely more on direct observation (Soetaert and Heip, 1990) also argued that
species indices are not always accurate, but worked on finding a way to improve results.
Diversity index
A diversity index is a quantitative measure that reflects how many different types
(such as species) there are in a dataset, and simultaneously takes into account how evenly
the basic entities (such as individuals) are distributed among those types. The value of a
diversity index increases both when the number of types increases and when evenness
increases. For a given number of types, the value of a diversity index is maximized when
It refers to the accounts for both abundance and evenness of the species present.
The proportion of species i relative to the total number of species (pi) is calculated, and
then multiplied by the natural logarithm of this proportion (𝑙𝑛𝑝𝑖 ). The resulting product is
2. the environment is quite stressful with relatively few ecological niches and only a
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4. change in the environment would probably have quite serious effects
2. more ecological niches are available and the environment is less likely to be
hostile
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III. METHODOLOGY
Site Selection
The study was conducted at Ditumabo Mother Falls in Brgy, Ditumabo, Baler,
Aurora. The selected site was divided into 5 stations starting from the entrance down to the
Mother Falls. All the trees were identified using taxonomic keys.
Data Collection
The diversity of trees in the study area was determined using quadrat method with
of replicated sample units referred to as quadrats or plots. This method is appropriate for
estimating the abundance of plants and other organisms. Diameter at breast height (DBH)
or circumference at chest height (CCH) (1.3 meters from the ground) of all the trees were
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measured variable that is related to the amount of growing space occupied by ;1 tree and it
Data Analysis
The following analyses were used in order to assess the diversity of flowering trees
The number of individual species in each quadrat - The number of each species that was
Percentage Occurrence – The number of station where the species occurred over the total
Frequency Distribution (F) – the number of quadrats where the species occurred over the
Relative Frequency (RF) – the frequency of species over the total frequency of species
multiplied by 100.
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Density (D) - the number of individuals of a species over the total area that were sampled.
Relative Density (RD) – the density of a species over the total density of all species
𝒅𝒆𝒏𝒔𝒊𝒕𝒚 𝒐𝒇 𝒔𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒊𝒆𝒔
𝑹𝑫 = 𝒙 𝟏𝟎𝟎
𝒕𝒐𝒕𝒂𝒍 𝒅𝒆𝒏𝒔𝒊𝒕𝒚 𝒐𝒇 𝒔𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒊𝒆𝒔
Dominance (Do)
Relative dominance
Importance value index - the measure to assess the overall significance of a species in a
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Species Diversity - determines the number of different species occupying the same area,
𝒏𝒖𝒎𝒃𝒆𝒓 𝒐𝒇 𝒔𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒊𝒆𝒔
𝑺𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒊𝒆𝒔 𝑫𝒊𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒔𝒊𝒕𝒚 =
√𝑻𝒐𝒕𝒂𝒍 𝒏𝒖𝒎𝒃𝒆𝒓 𝒐𝒇 𝒊𝒏𝒅𝒊𝒗𝒊𝒔𝒖𝒂𝒍 𝒔𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒊𝒆𝒔
Shannon Diversity Index (H) accounts for both abundance and evenness of the
species present. The proportion of species i relative to the total number of species (pi) is
calculated, and then multiplied by the natural logarithm of this proportion (𝑙𝑛𝑝𝑖 ). The
𝑯′ = − ∑ 𝒑𝒊 𝒍𝒏𝒑𝒊
𝒊=𝟏
Trees” (Alberto and Galvez, 2000) and “Trees of Tropical Asia: An illustrated guide to
Stem
The following structures are found in the stem; periderm, node, internode, terminal/apical
bud, lateral/axillary bud, leaf scar, bundle scar, bud scale scar and lenticels.
Leaves
The leaves will be classified according to its leaf arrangement and leaf venation.
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decussate and opposite in 2 ranks. A monocot leaf differs from a dicot leaf in terms of leaf
The type of inflorescence includes the corymb, catkin, panicle, cyme, spadix,
racem, umbel and spike. The classifications of fruits according to origin are simple,
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IV. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Ditumabo Falls is situated in the town of San Luis, a neighboring town of Baler,
specifically in Barangay Ditumabo. The falls is towering at around 140 feet and with the
cold water from the highland of Sierra Madre Mountain Range. The trek from the entrance
to the Mother falls is 1.3 km and it was divided into 5 stations and served as the study site.
Station 1 was started from the Entrance point of Ditumabo Mother Falls. The site
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Station 2: 520 meters away from the Entrance of Ditumabo Mother Falls
Station 2 is a rocky wet trail passing along and crossing the Ditumabo stream where the
Mother Falls is flowing and still surrounded by Gmelina trees and Niyog.
Station 3: 780 meters away from the Entrance of Ditumabo Mother Falls
Station 3 is still a rocky wet trail passing the water pipelines of the hydroelectric powerplant
that supplies power to Aurora Province. The site was surrounded by Tibig tree, Katmon
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Station 4: 1,040 meters away from the Entrance of Ditumabo Mother Falls
Station 4 which is a few meters from the Mother Falls is a small waterfall which they called
“Falls Alarm” as the tourist think that this is already the Mother Falls. This site was
Station 5 is the location of Ditumabo Mother Falls. The site was still surrounded by Dalunot
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Identification, Classification and Description of Trees
KATMON TREE
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Dilleniales
Family: Dilleniaceae
Genus: Dillenia
Species: Dillenia philippinensis Rolfe
coarsely toothed at the margins. Flowers are white, large, soft, fleshy, and green, 6 to 8
centimeters in diameter, with large fleshy sepals tightly enclosing the true fruit.
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BALOBO TREE
Division: Tracheophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Malvales
Family: Brownlowiaceae
Genus: Diplodiscus
Species: Diplodiscus paniculatus Turez
about 60 to 80 cm. It has a short bole, cylindrical sometimes angular, crooked, tapering
with somewhat slender branches, irregular shape and quite dense crown, high buttress,
symmetrical, and plank type. Its bark is rough, dirty brown, flaky-scaly, flaking and at
times sloughing into small irregular-shaped sheets, leaving flat scars on the surface of the
bole. It has simple leaves which are alternate, elliptic or oblong elliptic, glossy above with
obtuse to rounded, or slightly inequilateral base; obtuse to acute apex; with 5-7 nerves on
each side of the midrib, ascendingly curved grayish; young leaves are drooping with
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purplish tinged. The flowers are small, fragrant and whitish to yellowish, terminal or
subterminal panicles clustered towards the end of the branchlets. The fruit is subglobose
DALUNOT TREE
Division: Tracheophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Sapindales
Family: Urticaceae
Genus: Pipturus
Species: Pipturus arborescens
are ovate, 7 to 8 centimeters long, 3 to 10 centimeters wide, with the tip tapering to a point
and the base rounded or somewhat heart-shaped, the margins toothed, the upper surface
green, slightly hairy and a little rough, the lower surface pale and rather densely covered
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with soft hairs. Male flowers are borne in dense, axillary fascicles, with greenish-white and
exerted styles. Female flowers are small and greenish, in dense, axillary, hemispheric
heads, 5 to 6 millimeters in diameter, with long-exerted styles. Fruit is white, very soft and
fleshy, depressed, nearly spherical, about 1 centimeter in diameter, and consists of many
AVOCADO TREE
Division: Tracheophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Laurales
Family: Lauraceae
Genus: Persea
Species: Persea Americana Mill
Persea americana is a tree that grows to 20 m (66 ft), with alternately arranged
leaves 12–25 cm (4.7–9.8 in) long. Panicles of flowers with deciduous bracts arise from
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new growth or the axils of leaves. The flowers are inconspicuous, greenish-yellow, 5–10
fleshier fruits with a thinner exocarp. The avocado fruit is a climacteric, single-seeded
berry, due to the imperceptible endocarp covering the seed, rather than a drupe. The pear-
shaped fruit is 7–20 cm (2.8–7.9 in) long, weighs between 100 and 1,000 g (3.5 and 35.3
oz), and has a large central seed, 5–6.4 cm (2.0–2.5 in) long.
GMELINA TREE
Division: Tracheophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Lamiales
Family: Lamiaceae
Genus: Gmelina
Species: Gmelina arborea Roxb
prefers moist fertile valleys with 750–4500 mm rainfall. It does not thrive on ill-drained
soils and remains stunted on dry, sandy or poor soils; drought also reduces it to a shrubby
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form. The tree attains moderate to large heights of up to 30 m, with a girth of 1.2 to 4 m. It
has a chlorophyll layer just under the outer bark, which is pale yellow on the outside and
white inside.
COCONUT TREE
Division: Tracheophyta
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Arecales
Family: Arecaceae
Genus: Cocos
Species: Cocos nucifera L.
A tall palm a height of 30 m, the trunk stout, marked with annular scars, base
thickened. Leaves are 4 to 5.5 m long, crowded at the apex of the trunk, the petiole stout,
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up to 1 m in length. Inflorescence is 1 m long or less. Fruit is variable in shape and size,
stony endocarp.
MAHOGANY TREE
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Sapindales
Family: Meliaceae
Genus: Swietenia
Species: Swietenia macrophylla King
pinnately compound and petioled; leaflets are 6-12, opposite, obliquely-ovate, long
acuminate, glossy and dark green. Flowers are small and greenish yellow. Fruit is barrel-
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Diversity of Flowering Trees in Ditumabo Mother Falls Aurora
station where the species occurred over the total number of stations multiplied by one
hundred.
Table 1: Species abundance, relative frequency, basal area, and importance value
The table above shows the species occurrence of flowering trees in Ditumabo
Mother Falls Aurora. The highest percentage occurrence was the Balobo tree (Diplodiscus
paniculatus) which is 60% followed by Dalunot tree (40%), Gmelina tree (40%), and
Coconut tree (40%). The lowest percentage occurrence was the Mahogany tree and Katmon
tree (20%). The relative frequency shows the popularity or mode of a certain type of data
based on the population sampled. Based on the data, Balobo has the highest RF with
25.00% followed by Dalunot, Gmelina and Coconut tree (16.67%). However, the lowest
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Another parameter to measure the diversity of plants is the density is the relative
abundance which includes the density, relative density, dominance, relative dominance and
importance value index. The density refers to the number of individuals of a species over
the total area that were sampled which is estimated as 1,200 sq. meter while Relative
Density pertains to the density of a species over the total density of all species multiplied
by one hundred. The dominance obtained by dividing the basal area of species to the total
ecosystem the IVI or the importance value indices of species were obtained. The highest
relative dominance is Katmon (31.27%) followed by Dalunot (31.00%) and the lowest is
area. Based on the table 1, the highest importance value index is the Dalunot tree (71.67%)
this only implies that Diplodiscus paniculatus is the dominant species on the vicinity of
Ditumabo Mother Falls while Avocado has the lowest IVI with 12.81%.
The Shannon Diversity Index of 1.85 shows that there was a high diversity of
species at Ditumabo Mother Falls, San Luis Baler, Aurora. According to Magurran (2004),
typical values of Shannon Diversity Indices are generally between 1.5 and 3.5 in most
ecological studies, and the index is rarely greater than 4. The Shannon index increases as
both the richness and the evenness of the community increase. The fact that the index
richness.
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SUMMARY, CONCLUSION, AND RECOMMENDATION
Summary
Five stations were covered for the assessment on the diversity of flowering trees in
Ditumabo Mother Falls in San Luis Baler Aurora. The sample specimen were identified by
Prof. Paul Henrick F. Cojo Cruz, M.Sc, instructor I of Department of Biological Sciences
Central Luzon State University. The selected stations use 10 x 10m Quadrat method, there
were 6 species of flowering trees surveyed, with 48 number of individuals measured and
identified.
The most abundant species recorded was the Dalunot Tree (71.67%) which was
under the family Urticaceae containing 12 individuals observed followed by Balobo tree
with 58.61% of IVI and Katmon tree (51.61%). On the other hand, several species of trees
were also found to occur in only one station such as Avocado and Mahogay which was
occurred on station 1 only. The Shannon Diversity Index of 1.85 also shows that there was
a high diversity of species at Ditumabo Mother Falls, San Luis Baler, Aurora.
Conclusion
Based on the results of the study it can be concluded that the Ditumabo Mother
Falls Baler Aurora has diverse species of flowering trees as indicated by the diversity index,
of 1.85 with over 48 number of individual trees, 6 species of flowering trees were identified
and classified. Moreover, among all of the species of trees, Dalunot which belongs to the
family Urticaceae was found out to be the most abundant and most dominant species.
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Recommendations
On the basis of the results of this study, the following recommendations are made:
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LITERATUTE CITED
Bahadur, B., Rajam, M. V., Sahijram, L., & Krishnamurthy, K. V. (2015). Plant biology
and biotechnology: Plant diversity, organization, function and improvement. Plant
Biology and Biotechnology: Plant Diversity, Organization, Function and
Improvement, 1(March 2016), 1–827. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-2286-6
Lambin, E. F. and Meyfroidt, P. (2011) Global and land use change, economic
globalization and the looming land scarcity. Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, 108 (9): 577-586. Doi: 10.1073/pnas.1100480108.
Seghieri J, Floret Ch, Pontanier R. 1995. Plant phenology in relation to water availability:
herbaceous and woody species in the savannas of northern Cameroon. Journal of
Tropical Ecology 11: 237–254.
Venkatesh, G., Gerdesmeier, D., Primer, A., Walther, L. M., Summary, E., Pierce, K. E.
N., … Graham, P. (2016). Sustainable financing for forest and landscape restoration:
Opportunities, challenges, and the way forward. Dipterocarps of the Philippines,
11(February 2015), 131. Retrieved from
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APPENDICES
APPENDIX A
CERTIFICATE OF IDENTIFICATION
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APPENDIX B
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