EFFECTS OF MICROTOPOGRAPHY AND DISTURBANCE ON FINE-ROOT DYNAMICS IN WETLAND FORESTS OF LOW-ORDER STREAM FLOODPLAINS

Citation
Rh. Jones et al., EFFECTS OF MICROTOPOGRAPHY AND DISTURBANCE ON FINE-ROOT DYNAMICS IN WETLAND FORESTS OF LOW-ORDER STREAM FLOODPLAINS, The American midland naturalist, 136(1), 1996, pp. 57-71
Citations number
55
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
ISSN journal
00030031
Volume
136
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
57 - 71
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-0031(1996)136:1<57:EOMADO>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Fine-root mass and net primary productivity (NPP) were assessed in two forested wetlands located in floodplains of low-order streams in sout hern Alabama. In one experiment, live and dead fine-root (less than or equal to 5 mm diam) mass in the upper 20 cm of soil were estimated by periodic soil coring for 7 mo. Cores were collected from P-fertilized and unfertilized portions of three microsite types: hummock, flat and hollow In a second experiment, cores to 50 cm deep were collected fro m clear-cut and adjacent unharvested (reference) zones for 19 mo. Tn t he first experiment, fine-root mass was significantly affected by micr osite but not fertilizer. Roots were least abundant but temporally mos t variable in hollows, and fine-root NPP (estimated by summing root ma ss differences between sample dates) was greatest in hollows followed by flats and hummocks. In the clear-cut experiment, total fine-root ma ss was highly variable in clear-cut and reference sites. The ratio of live- to total-root mass was significantly lower on clear-cut sites on four of nine sample dates. NPP in the upper 50 cm of soil ranged betw een 1.90 and 4.55 megagrams per ha per year and was consistently, but not significantly, greater on reference than on clear-cut sites. This study suggests that fine-root dynamics in forested wetlands are affect ed by microtopography and possibly by disturbance to the overstory.