The influence of soil and coppice cycle on the rooting habit of short rotation poplar and willow coppice
β Scribed by P. Crow; T.J. Houston
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 330 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0961-9534
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The increased demand for renewable energy sources has led to large areas of former agricultural land being proposed for short rotation coppice (SRC) establishment. Concerns expressed over the potential impacts of tree roots on buried archaeological evidence led to a study into the rooting habit of SRC. Roots were exposed in trenches dug within a variety of willow and poplar clonal stands grown on brown earth, pelosol, ground-water gley and surface-water gley soils. Root depths and diameters were recorded in each of the 33 trenches. In total, over 18,000 roots were measured on 264 coppice stools. The rotation length, species and stool location within a block were all found to in uence the maximum size of root produced. Soil type had some in uence on the root number and depth, but the pattern of root distribution down the soil proΓΏle was similar for both species.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Below-ground characteristics of five Populus clones, belonging to different species and parentages, were studied during the second growing season of the third rotation of a high-density coppice culture. Size (length, area and volume), biomass, nitrogen and carbon concentrations of three classes of f