Abstract
Coastal dune ecosystems of the Moroccan Atlantic coast are among the most threatened environments of the western Mediterranean basin, yet the ecological preferences of their constituent psammophilous flora remain poorly documented. Using the ecological profile method, corrected frequencies, species and descriptor entropy, mutual information and ecological barycentres were calculated for three environmental descriptors, distance to the tidal fluctuation zone, topographic position and soil organic matter content, applied to a presence–absence matrix of 53 vascular taxa across 123 plots distributed among three dune facies. Of the total taxa inventoried, 41 were retained as ecologically active. Topography and soil organic matter emerged as the most efficient descriptors, both exceeding the 5% activity threshold. Cross-referencing of ecological groups identified three phytoecological assemblages: characteristic psammophytes of embryonic dunes, species of the primary foredune and species of the enriched backdune. The dominance of intermediate ecological amplitudes and the convergence of introduced species towards organic matter-rich backdune conditions signal chronic anthropogenic disturbance. This study provides a quantitative characterisation of psammophilous species ecological preferences and phytoecological assemblages along the coast–inland gradient of the Haouzia Bay SBEI, constituting an operational reference framework for targeted conservation and restoration management of this threatened coastal site.
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