Effect of slope and aspect on the associated flora of pinyon pines in central Mexico
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To test the hypothesis that Mexican pinyons (Pinus cembroides) and Johannis pines (P. johannis) grow under different environmental conditions, the flora associated with both species was sampled along two 20-m perpendicular transects at 40 sites. Patterns were analyzed with the two-way-indicator-species program, which yielded six groups with Mexican pinyons dominating xeric sites and Johannis pines dominating mesic sites. Other groups of species corresponded to transition from mesic to xeric sites. We used canonical-correspondence analysis to explore the effect of slope and aspect on species and indirectly related them to an underlying moisture gradient. The first ordination axis indicated that aspect explained 59%25 of the variation, and the second axis, representing slope, explained 41%25.