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Hydraulic conductivities of competing root systems of Grevillea robustaand maize in agroforestry
Authors:D.M. Smith  J.M. Roberts
Affiliation:(1) Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, U.K;(2) CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, Davies Laboratory, Private Bag, Aitkenvale Mail Centre, Queensland, 4814, Australia
Abstract:Models of water uptake in mixed stands of vegetation commonly assume that water is partitioned among competing root systems in proportion to relative root length densities. Such an approach assumes implicitly that roots of different species have equivalent hydraulic properties. This was tested for root systems of Grevillea robustaA. Cunn. and maize (Zea maysL.) at a semi-arid site in Kenya. The hydraulic conductances for roots of both species were measured in situat the scale of the whole root or root system using a high pressure flow meter (HPFM). Hydraulic conductivities (kappar) were expressed per unit root length. Root lengths were estimated for maize plants by soil coring and for G. robustausing a fractal branching model calibrated against soil coring. Mean kappar was 1.88×10–7 ±0.28×10–7kg s–1 MPa–1 m–1 for G. robustaand 1.25×10–7 ±0.13×10–7kg s–1 MPa–1 m–1 for maize. Values of kappar were not significantly different (P<0.05), suggesting that the assumption of hydraulic equivalence for root systems of the two species may be valid, at least when hydrostatic gradients are the major driving force for water uptake. Differences in conductivities between these species could arise, however, because of variation in the hydraulic properties of roots not accounted for here, for example because of root age, phenology or responses to the soil environment.
Keywords:competition for water  fractal branching  HPFM  mixed vegetation
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