Electrical measurement of tree root absorbing surfaces by the earth impedance method: 2. Verification based on allometric relationships and root severing experiments
Jazyk angličtina Země Kanada Médium print
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
- MeSH
- absorpce MeSH
- Acer anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- borovice anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- buk (rod) anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- dub (rod) anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- elektrická vodivost * MeSH
- kořeny rostlin anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- Olea anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- půda * MeSH
- smrk anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- stromy anatomie a histologie metabolismus MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- půda * MeSH
We validated, by means of allometric relationships and root severing experiments, the modified earth impedance method developed for measuring absorbing root surfaces. For the allometric studies, a series of 350 small and large trees of six broadleaf and coniferous species in several experimental sites was examined. We found a good linear ln-ln fit between absorbing root surface area and basal area (or stem cross-sectional area at the root collar in seedlings) over a range of stem diameters from 0.5-55 cm. The absorbing root surface area also changed consistently with crown projected area and the root-accessed area (territory) of the tree. At the whole-tree level, absorbing root surface area reached about 70 times that of basal area and 40% of crown projected area, or roughly 1/3 of the root-accessed area in Norway spruce (in this species, the ratio was relatively larger in small trees and smaller in large trees). The absorbing root surfaces of mechanically severed parts of Norway spruce root systems changed in about the same proportions as the geometrically determined parts of the severed root systems. These results are promising and support field applications of the method in biological and ecological studies.
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
Jan Čermák's lifetime contribution to tree water relations
Assessing the applicability of the earth impedance method for in situ studies of tree root systems