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Phytogeography of the Eastern Desert flora of Egypt

Research Authors
Monier Abd El-Ghani, Fawzy Salama, Boshra Salem,
Azza El-Hadidy & Mohamed Abdel-Aleem
Research Abstract

328 species in total were recorded at 500 sites between 30° 06’ and 24° 00’N in the Eastern Desert of Egypt. The occurrence of species was classified into 5 constancy classes: dominant, very common, common, occasional and sporadic. A sharp decrease in the number of recorded species was noticed along the N–S direction from Cairo-Suez road in the north to Aswan-Baranis road in the south (from 179 to 23), and an increase along the E–W direction from the Red Sea coast in the east to the River Nile Valley in the west (from 46 to 80). It was found out that geographical affinities affect the patterns of species distribution: 82 annual (therophyte) species are dominant life forms within the northern part of the study area, followed by 33 species in the southern part. Phanerophytes (trees) showed a decrease in their number from north (13 species) to south (9 species), but a slight increase from east (9 species) to west (10 species). Distribution maps of local geographical subtypes of each of the 4 major chorotypes are shown and a suggested improved phytogeographical map is presented.

Research Journal
Wulfenia

Research Publisher
Mitteilungen des Kärntner Botanikzentrums Klagenfurt
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Wulfenia 24 (2017)
Research Website
NULL
Research Year
2017
Research Pages
97–120