# Floristic Inventory and Diversity Assessment at Two Locations along the Shores of Cape Coast, Ghana

**Authors:** Gertrude Lucky Aku Dali, Sethiler Arthur, Paul Kwame Essandoh

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/2024/5195390 · 2024-08-29

## TL;DR

This study compares plant diversity at two beaches in Cape Coast, Ghana, finding that human activities reduce biodiversity.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed floristic inventory and diversity assessment along Cape Coast's shoreline.

## Key findings

- Asasse Pa beach had higher species diversity and evenness compared to Hutchland beach.
- Poaceae was the most species-rich family, with 10 species recorded.
- Human activities at Hutchland beach likely contributed to lower biodiversity.

## Abstract

Coastal vegetation plays significant roles such as stabilization of the surface against wind and erosion, and provision of critical terrestrial and aquatic habitats for organisms. Floristic studies serve as a way of monitoring and evaluating the health of ecosystems. Currently, information on the floristic composition and diversity along the shoreline of Cape Coast is scanty. The study was aimed at assessing the impacts of anthropogenic activities on plant biodiversity along the shoreline of Cape Coast, Ghana. Thus, the study analysed the biodiversity of plants at the Hutchland beach (a disturbed area) and the Asasse Pa beach (a fairly undisturbed area). It was hypothesised that the Asasse Pa beach had a higher species diversity than the Hutchland beach. An inventory was made of all plant species found at both locations. A belt transect method was used for the ecological study, involving the use of a 1 m2 quadrat. All the plants that were found in each quadrat were identified, and the species and number of individuals of each species were counted—this information was used in the determination of the ecological parameters of the species and the locations. Parameters between the two locations were compared with a t-test, whereas variations in the distribution of the species were determined with principal components analysis (PCA), using Minitab and R statistical software, respectively. A total of 50 plant species belonging to 48 genera and 23 families were inventoried along the shoreline. The family Poaceae had the highest number of species, 10. The Asasse Pa beach had a higher species diversity and evenness of 2.84 and 0.84, respectively, whereas the Hutchland beach had a lower species diversity and evenness of 2.44 and 0.75, respectively. Anthropogenic activities at the Hutchland beach might have accounted for the lower species diversity and evenness there. The study therefore recommends periodic monitoring of coastal vegetation also law enforcement on coastal resources.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** loss (MESH:D016388), sexual disorders (MESH:D012734), infertility (MESH:D007246), prostate (MESH:D011472), chest pain (MESH:D002637), erectile dysfunction (MESH:D007172)
- **Chemicals:** Asasse (-), Cr (MESH:D002857), carbon (MESH:D002244), Cd (MESH:D002104), As (MESH:D001151)
- **Species:** Launaea taraxacifolia (species) [taxon 2851007], Setaria pallide-fusca (species) [taxon 1043341], Gomphrena celosioides (species) [taxon 217251], Abutilon mauritianum (species) [taxon 1670833], Limosilactobacillus fermentum (species) [taxon 1613], Moeroris amara (carry-me seed, species) [taxon 293060], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Cenchrus biflorus (species) [taxon 1643560], Canavalia rosea (species) [taxon 3825], Cyperus rotundus (species) [taxon 512623], Pupalia lappacea (species) [taxon 240105], Imperata cylindrica (species) [taxon 80369], Baphia nitida (species) [taxon 162666], Cosavirus D (no rank) [taxon 2003650], Boerhavia diffusa (species) [taxon 930814], Euphorbia heterophylla (species) [taxon 212910], Oldenlandia corymbosa (species) [taxon 43536], Trianthema portulacastrum (species) [taxon 3548], Paspalum vaginatum (biscuit grass, species) [taxon 158149], Indigofera hirsuta (species) [taxon 539088], Malvastrum coromandelianum (species) [taxon 108453], Tribulus terrestris (species) [taxon 210369], Commelina diffusa (species) [taxon 428226], Opuntia ficus-indica (Indian-fig, species) [taxon 371859], Capraria biflora (species) [taxon 255867], Chloris pilosa (species) [taxon 1704187], Aspilia (genus) [taxon 505277], Alternanthera pungens (species) [taxon 240021], Dactyloctenium aegyptium (Egyptian grass, species) [taxon 270102], Axonopus compressus (broadleaf carpetgrass, species) [taxon 217170], Physalis angulata (species) [taxon 113208], Thespesia populnea (species) [taxon 3638], Amaranthus spinosus (species) [taxon 124765], Momordica charantia (balsam pear, species) [taxon 3673], Cyperus esculentus (species) [taxon 1053340], Cocos nucifera (coconut palm, species) [taxon 13894], Cynodon dactylon (Bermuda grass, species) [taxon 28909], Ruellia tuberosa (species) [taxon 441035], Cyathula prostrata (species) [taxon 221766]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11377112/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11377112