Author:
Crawford Michael C.,Grace Peter R.,Bellotti W. (Bill) D.,Oades J. Malcolm
Abstract
Total root biomass production of a grazed annual legume pasture
(Medicago truncatula), a grazed annual grass pasture
(Hordeum leporinum), and a grain legume crop
(Vicia faba) was estimated using a sequential coring and
summation technique with corrections made for root death and decomposition
during the season. Distribution of live root biomass with depth and C: N
ratios of roots were also determined. Both in a dry season and in a season of
average rainfall, total root biomass production of the 2 pasture species was
similar and always greater than the faba beans. Total root biomass production
estimated using this technique was 60-200% greater than the maximum
live root biomass, suggesting that there was significant root turnover during
the season. In the dry season, the ratios of total root production to total
shoot production were 0·55, 0·57, and 0·32 for the barrel
medic, barley grass, and faba beans, respectively, and in the wetter season,
the ratios were 0·40, 0·42, and 0·25, respectively.
Potential errors in the technique related to the recovery of root material and
the decomposition of dead roots and old organic material are discussed, as are
the implications of this information for soil organic matter dynamics.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
22 articles.
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