Altitudinal distribution of several eucalypt species in relation to other environmental factors in southern New South Wales

Four problems associated with studying the altitudinal distribution of eucalypt species are examined: the lack of specific physiological relationship between altitude and plant growth, the influence of other environmental factors, the availability of suitable data and the need for statistical analysis. Presence/absence data for eucalypt species were obtained from several sources. Probability of occurrence in 100 m zones is determined for E. maculata, E. muellerana, E. fastigata, E. sieberi, E. dalrympleana and E. pauciflora. The influence of other factors is demonstrated for several species using direct gradient analysis. Aspect is important for E. fastigata and E. rossii in addition to altitude and rainfall. The statisical model used was the logit-linear model: log (p/I– p) = linear function of environmental variables where p is the expected probability of being present for a given combination of environmental variables. Two examples are presented. E. dalrympleana can be predicted from altitude, rainfall, radiation index (measure of aspect) and an interaction term between altitude and aspect. E. rossii presence is predicted by altitude, rainfall, radiation index and geology. Altitude is transformed into an estimate of mean annual temperature which is shown to clarify some overlaps of species distribution. It is concluded that use of data collected for other purposes can be used in a generalized linear model for presence data to show the complex correlations which exist between the altitudinal distribution of some eucalypts and other environmental factors.