Journal article
Root biomass of carbon plantings in agricultural landscapes of southern Australia: Development and testing of allometrics
Forest Ecology and Management, Vol.318, pp.216-227
2014
Abstract
Root biomass may to contribute a substantial proportion of the carbon sequestered in new tree plantings, particularly in regions where rainfall and/or site quality is relatively low as this may result in relatively high allocation of plant biomass below-ground to source required water or nutrients. However, root biomass is often overlooked because of difficulty with measurement. In Australia, most carbon plantings are currently mixed-species environmental or mallee eucalypt plantings on agricultural land in regions with rainfall of 250-850mmyear-1. Here, we collated new and existing root biomass data from ca. 900 individual trees or shrubs to develop and test allometric equations for predicting root biomass based on stem diameter (of unharvested trees or shrubs) or height (of coppice harvested trees) in these plantings. Equations developed showed significant differences between groupings of species with differing growth habits or from different genera. Grouping species into categories of: (i) non-eucalypts, (ii) tree-form eucalypts, (iii) unharvested mallee eucalypts, and (iv) coppiced mallee eucalypts, provided equations with model efficiencies of 0.64-0.90. In the process of collating data across different studies, corrections were required for data consistency. Uncertainty analysis showed that although these corrections resulted in some uncertainty in the equations developed, measurement errors, particularly of stem diameter, were also important contributors to this uncertainty. We tested equations developed using data from 11 environmental and mallee planting sites where direct measurements of root biomass were made through whole-plot excavation. Site-level predictions of root biomass from individual tree allometry were effective, with an efficiency of prediction of 0.98. These results indicate that the generic allometric equations developed can be confidently applied across the Australian agricultural region with 250-850mmyear-1 rainfall to obtain accurate regional estimates of root biomass in the currently relatively young (<20year old) environmental and mallee plantings.
Details
- Title
- Root biomass of carbon plantings in agricultural landscapes of southern Australia: Development and testing of allometrics
- Authors/Creators
- K.I. Paul (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesS.H. Roxburgh (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesJ.R. England (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesK. Brooksbank (Author/Creator) - Agriculture and FoodJ.S. Larmour (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesP. Ritson (Author/Creator) - Forest Products CommissionD. Wildy (Author/Creator) - Fares Rural Pty Ltd., PO Box 526, Wembley, WA 6913, AustraliaR. Sudmeyer (Author/Creator) - Agriculture and FoodR.J. Raison (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesT. Hobbs (Author/Creator) - Government of South AustraliaS. Murphy (Author/Creator) - The University of MelbourneS. Sochacki (Author/Creator) - Murdoch UniversityG. McArthur (Author/Creator) - AusCarbon Pty Ltd., PO Box 395, Nedlands, WA 6909, AustraliaC. Barton (Author/Creator)J. Jonson (Author/Creator) - ResourceS. Theiveyanathan (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem SciencesJ. Carter (Author/Creator) - Ecosystem Sciences
- Publication Details
- Forest Ecology and Management, Vol.318, pp.216-227
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Identifiers
- 991005543629607891
- Copyright
- © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
- Murdoch Affiliation
- School of Veterinary and Life Sciences
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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Source: InCites
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Citation topics
- 3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
- 3.40 Forestry
- 3.40.55 Forest Dynamics
- Web Of Science research areas
- Forestry
- ESI research areas
- Plant & Animal Science