Summary
The variation in growth of the fine roots of blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus labill. ssp.globulus) in the 0–40 cm soil layer was studied from March 1982 to March 1983 at Quinta do Furaduoro, Óbidos, Portugal. A mesh bag method was used; bags of nylon net were inserted into a clay soil and a sandy soil and filled with root-free soil. They were resampled after 2, 4, 6 and 12 months in both places and, in a separate series in the sandy soil every second month throughout the year.
The ingrowth of roots was high during the winter months but there was also a surprisingly high ingrowth during the spring-early summer period. There was also some root growth during the driest part of the yearviz. July–September.
The amount of fine roots reached a maximum of about 260 g dw m−2 after about 6 months in the sandy soil, whereas it took at least 12 months to reach the somewhat higher level of 450 g dw m−2 in the clay soil. At that level the decomposition of dead roots was expected to equal the formation of new roots. Dead roots appeared after only 2 months. There was a higher proportion of dead roots in the clay soil than in the sandy soil, 35% as compared with 20% on an average, which indicates a slower decomposition or a higher mortality at equal decomposition rates in the clay than and in the sandy soil. The present data gives an indication of a minimum fine root production in mature Eucalyptus stands of at least 600 g dw m−2 yr−1.
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Fabião, A., Persson, H.Å. & Steen, E. Growth dynamics of superficial roots in Portuguese plantations ofEucalyptus globulus Labill. studied with a mesh bag technique. Plant Soil 83, 233–242 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02184295
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02184295