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Effects of soil physicochemical properties and stand age on fine root biomass and vertical distribution of plantation forests in the Loess Plateau of China
Author(s) -
Chang Ruiying,
Fu Bojie,
Liu Guohua,
Yao Xueling,
Wang Shuai
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.628
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1440-1703
pISSN - 0912-3814
DOI - 10.1007/s11284-012-0958-0
Subject(s) - robinia , loess plateau , environmental science , biomass (ecology) , loess , plateau (mathematics) , ecology , soil science , geology , biology , mathematical analysis , mathematics , geomorphology
The responses of aboveground parts of the forest to changes in environmental factors and stand age is well studied, but the same is not true for the belowground parts of the forest. Two plantation black locust ( Robinia pseudoacacia L.) forest sites were taken in the Loess Plateau of China, one in the drier, infertile, more sandy area of the middle Loess Plateau, and another in the wetter, fertile, more clay‐filled area of the southern Loess Plateau. At each site, both a younger (8‐year‐old) plantation stand and an older (30‐year‐old) plantation stand were included to study the effects of soil physicochemical properties and stand age on the fine root (<2 mm) biomass and vertical distribution of black locust forests. Root samples were taken with soil cores to a depth of 100 cm. The fine root biomass decreased from the middle site to the southern site for both stand ages, as expected, and the decrease could be due to a higher fine root N concentration associated with a higher fine root turnover rate at the southern site. There was a similar rooting pattern, though not deeper, in the drier, sandy site as predicted based on soil water infiltration and evaporation demands. The different effects of stand characters (e.g., tree density, tree height) on the fine root distribution as compared with the environmental properties may contribute partly to the similar pattern found in the two sites. The fine root biomass increased with stand age in both sites. In contrast to the evident difference in fine root biomass, there was no clear trend in the fine root vertical distribution pattern with stand age. Our results indicate that fine roots are likely to respond to changes in soil physicochemical properties and stand age by changing fine root biomass rather than by varying rooting pattern.

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