EFFECTS OF THINNING IN A 43-YEAR-OLD DOUGLAS-FIR STAND ON ABOVE-GROUND AND BELOW-GROUND BIOMASS ALLOCATION AND LEAF STRUCTURE OF UNDERSTORY GAULTHERIA SHALLON
被引:17
作者:
MESSIER, C
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
FORESTRY CANADA, PACIFIC FORESTRY CTR, VICTORIA V8Z 1M5, BC, CANADAFORESTRY CANADA, PACIFIC FORESTRY CTR, VICTORIA V8Z 1M5, BC, CANADA
MESSIER, C
[1
]
MITCHELL, AK
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
FORESTRY CANADA, PACIFIC FORESTRY CTR, VICTORIA V8Z 1M5, BC, CANADAFORESTRY CANADA, PACIFIC FORESTRY CTR, VICTORIA V8Z 1M5, BC, CANADA
The above- and below-ground biomass allocation and leaf structure of understory salal (Gaultheria shallon) were compared between an unthinned and a heavily thinned (two-thirds of basal area removed) 43-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) plot 6 years after thinning at Shawnigan Lake on southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The increase in both above- and below-ground resources caused by thinning resulted in a smaller fine-root/leaf biomass ratio in the thinned (1.2) than the unthinned (2.0) plot. The balance between the production of fine-roots to acquire limited water and of foliage to acquire limited light is suggested as an explanation for this shift in carbon allocation from fine-root to leaf biomass between the two plots. The responses of G. shallon to thinning are discussed in relation to its role as a competitor for below-ground resources.