EFFECT OF ELEVATED CO^sub 2^ ON COARSE-ROOT BIOMASS IN FLORIDA SCRUB DETECTED BY GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR
Growth and distribution of coarse roots in time and space represent a gap in our understanding of belowground ecology. Large roots may play a critical role in carbon sequestration belowground. Using ground-penetrating radar (GPR), we quantified coarse- root biomass from an open-top chamber experimen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 2007-05, Vol.88 (5), p.1328 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Growth and distribution of coarse roots in time and space represent a gap in our understanding of belowground ecology. Large roots may play a critical role in carbon sequestration belowground. Using ground-penetrating radar (GPR), we quantified coarse- root biomass from an open-top chamber experiment in a scrub-oak ecosystem at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA. GPR propagates electromagnetic waves directly into the soil and reflects a portion of the energy when a buried object is contacted. In our study, we utilized a 1500 MHz antenna to establish correlations between GPR signals and root biomass. A significant relationship was found between GPR signal reflectance and biomass (R... = 0.68). This correlation was applied to multiple GPR scans taken from each open-top chamber (elevated and ambient CO...). Our results showed that plots receiving elevated CO... had significantly (P = 0.049) greater coarse-root biomass compared to ambient plots, suggesting that coarse roots may play a large role in carbon sequestration in scrub-oak ecosystems. This nondestructive method holds much promise for rapid and repeatable quantification of coarse roots, which are currently the most elusive aspect of long-term belowground studies. (ProQuest-CSA LLC: ... denotes formulae/symbols omitted.) |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |