Effects of irrigation on litterfall,fine root biomass and production in a semideciduous lowland forest in Panama |
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Authors: | Cavelier Jaime Wright S. Joseph Santamaría Johanna |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad de los Andes, Santafé de Bogotá, Colombia;(2) Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apdo 2072, Balboa, Panama |
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Abstract: | ![]() The effects of irrigation on fine root biomass, root production and litterfall were measured at the community level, in a semideciduous lowland forest in Panama. Biomass of roots less than 2 mm in dia. in the first 10 cm of the soil (measured with soil cores), was higher in irrigated (1.80 Mg ha-1) than in non-irrigated plots (1.24 Mg ha-1). During the dry season, productivity of roots (measured with ingrowth cylinders filled with root-free soil), was higher in irrigated (1.6 g m-2 day-1) than in control plots (0.3 g m-2 day-1). In control plots, root productivity was highly seasonal. Maximum root growth into the root-free soil, occurred during the transitions from dry to wet, and from wet to dry season, possibly as a response to water and/or nutrient pulses. Litterfall was not significantly different between irrigated (3.8 g m-2 day-1) and control plots (3.7 g m-2 day-1). The results of this study show that root-productivity is limited by the water supply during the dry season, and that water by itself, is not a limiting factor for community-level litter production. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | below ground- productivity biomass fine roots irrigation litterfall lowland forest |
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