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Cleavitt, NL; Fahey, TJ; Groffman, PM; Hardy, JP; Henry, KS; Driscoll, CT. 2008. Effects of soil freezing on fine roots in a northern hardwood forest. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE
FORESTIERE. 38(1):82-91.
Address:
Fahey, TJ, Cornell Univ, Dept Nat Resources, Fernow Hall, Ithaca, NY
14853
We reduced early winter snowpack in four experimental plots at the
Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hamphire for 2 years to
examine the mechanisms of root injury associated with soil freezing.
Three lines of evidence suggested that direct cellular damage, rather
than physical damage associated with frost heaving, was the principal
mechanism of root injury: (i) decreases in root vitality were not
greater on sites with more frost heaving, (ii) in situ freezing damage
was confined to first- and second-order roots in the organic horizons
rather than entire root systems, and (iii) tensile strength of fine
roots was not significantly compromised by experimental stretching to
simulate ice lens formation. Although significant differences in the
intensity of soil freezing (depth, rate, and minimum temperature) were
observed across the plots, no clear effects of soil freezing intensity
on root injury were observed. Snow manipulation had no effect on
mycorrhizal colonization of sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) roots.
A significant increase in root growth was observed in the second summer
after treatments, coincident with a significant pulse of soil nitrate
leaching. Through their effects on fine roots, soil freezing events
could play an important role in forest ecosystem dynamics in a changing
climate.
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