Research Branch Staff Publications
Root biomass distribution under three cover types in a patchy Pseudotsuga menziesii forest in western Canada.
- Citation:
-
Richardson, Andrew D., C. Bealle Statland, and T.G. Gregoire.
2003.
Root biomass distribution under three cover types in a patchy Pseudotsuga menziesii forest in western Canada.
Ann. For Sci. 60, 469-474.
- Abstract:
-
We investigated the relationship between cover type and root biomass distribution and allocation to different root size classes in a naturally regenerated, dry, Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir (pseudotsuga menziesii var. glauca) forest in the southern interior of British Columbia, Canada. The site was selectively harvested 32 years previously; residual stems were 30 cm and 130-170 years old at breast height at the time of study. A total of nine pits (each measuring 1.0m x 1.0m) were excavated to a depth of 1.0 m under three different cover types: mature timber, grassy (Calamagrostis rubescens) openings (canopy gaps), and regeneration clumps. Total (all diameters) live root biomass ranged from 4.7 kg/m2 under the mature timber to 1.9 kg/m2 under both regeneration clumps and grassy openings. Thin root (0.1 cm < phi < 0.5 cm) biomass was similar across all three cover types (0.8 kg/m2). We suggest that the similarity of thin root biomass across the three cover types is indicative of strong root competition at this resource-poor site: there appears to be no below-ground "root gap" corresponding to the canopy opening above the pinegrass-dominated patches.
- Availability:
Back to Research Branch Staff Publications.
Questions? Check the author links above, or contact Research Branch.
Webmaster: for.prodres@gov.bc.ca
|