Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T04:08:19.714Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Root biomass of a mangrove forest in southern Thailand. 1. Estimation by the trench method and the zonal structure of root biomass

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Akira Komiyama
Affiliation:
Faculty of Agriculture, Gifu Univeristy, Gifu 501-11, Japan
Kazuhiko Ogino
Affiliation:
Faculty of Agriculture, Ehime University, Ehime 790, Japan
Sanit Aksornkoae
Affiliation:
Faculty of Forestry, Kasetsart University, Bangkok 10900, Thailand
Sanga Sabhasri
Affiliation:
Ministry of Science, Technology and Energy, Bangkok 10400, Thailand

Abstract

In a mangrove forest in southern Thailand, the root biomass was estimated for the Sonneratia zone, the Sonneratia-Bruguiera ecotone, the Bruguiera zone and the Rhizophora zone. A 0.2 m (width) × 15.5 m (length) × 1.0 m (depth) trench was dug between two trees of Rhizophora apiculata and the roots in the trench harvested, rinsed, sorted by diameter and weighed. The dry weight of roots collected from the trench was 135.6 kg, equivalent to a total root biomass of 437.5 t ha−1 including 220.5 t ha−1 of fine roots.

The root density distribution of a single tree was assumed to be predictable exponentially. Two variables of the equation were determined by iteration using the data from a trench excavation and tree distribution study. This equation was applied to 1.3 ha and the root biomass distribution was analysed. The root biomass in each of the above four zones was estimated at 171.8, 84.8, 242.6 and 509.5 t ha−1, respectively. The proportion of fine roots (<2 mm) ranged from 46.4% to 66.4%.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

Baskerville, G. L. 1966. Dry matter production in immature balsam fir stands: roots, lesser vegetation and total stand. Forest Science 12:953.Google Scholar
Berish, C. W. 1982. Root biomass and surface area in three successional tropical forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 12:699704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Briggs, S. V. 1977. Estimates of biomass in a temperate mangrove community. Australian Journal of Ecology 2:369373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, S. B. 1970. The nutrient content of the soil and root system of a dry heath ecosystem. Journal of Ecology 58:445452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, B. 1978. Biomass and primary production of Rhizophora apiculata mangrove forest in southern Thailand. Aquatic Botany 3:4352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cornforth, I. S. 1970. Leaf-fall in a tropical rain forest. Journal of Applied Ecology 7:603608.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deans, J. D. 1981. Dynamics of coarse root production in a young plantation of Picea sitchensis. Forestry 54:139155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, P. J. & Grubb, P. J. 1982. Studies of mineral cycling in a montane forest in New Guinea. IV. Soil characteristics and the division of mineral elements between the vegetation and soil. Journal of Ecology 70:649666.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, A. M. & Tomlinson, P. B. 1977. Studies on the growth of red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) 4. The adult root system. Biotropica 9:145155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golley, F. B., Odum, H. T. & Wilson, R. F. 1962. The structure and metabolism of a Puerto Rico red mangrove forest in May. Ecology 43:919.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golley, F. B., Mcginnis, J. T., Clements, R. G., Child, G. I. & Duever, M. J. 1975. Mineral cycling in a tropical moist forest ecosystem. University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA.Google Scholar
Greenland, D. J. & Kowal, J. M. L. 1960. Nutrient content of the moist tropical forest of Ghana. Plant & Soil 12:154174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffman, A. & Kummerow, J. 1978. Root studies in the Chilean matorral. Oecologia 32:5769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huttel, C. 1975. Root distribution and biomass in three Ivory Coast rain forest plots. Pp. 123130 in Golley, F. B. & Medina, E. (eds). Tropical ecological systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, C. F. & Escalante, G. 1980. Root productivity in an Amazonian rain forest. Ecology 61:1418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karizumi, N. 1974. The mechanism and function of tree root in the process of forest production. 2. Root biomass and distribution in stands. Bulletin of the Government Forest Experimental Station, Meguro, Tokyo, No. 267:188.Google Scholar
Karizumi, N. 1978. Underground biomass. Pp. 8288 in Kira, T., Ono, Y., & Hosokawa, T. (eds.). Biological production in a warm-temperate evergreen oak forest of Japan. JIBP Synthesis volume 18, University of Tokyo Press, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Klinge, H. & Hererra, R. 1978. Biomass studies in Amazon caatinga forest in southern Venezuela. 1. Standing crop of composite root mass in selected stands. Tropical Ecology 19:93110.Google Scholar
Kummerow, J., Krause, D. & Jow, W. 1977. Root systems of chaparral shrubs. Oecologia 29:163177.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lawson, G. W., Armstrong-Mensah, K. O. & Hall, J. B. 1970. A catena in tropical moist semideciduous forest near Kade, Ghana. Journal of Ecology 58:371398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lugo, A. E. & Snedaker, S. C. 1974. The ecology of mangroves. Annual Review of Ecology & Systematics 5:288313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macnae, W. 1968. A general account of the fauna and flora of mangrove swamps and forests in the Indo-West-Pacific region. Advances in Marine Biology 6:73270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ong, J. E., Gong, W. K. & Wong, C. H. 1982. Studies on nutrient levels in standing biomass, litter and slash in a mangrove forest. Biotrop (Contract No. 3557/CS/XII/80), Bogor. 44 pages.Google Scholar
Ovington, J. D. 1957. Dry matter production by Pinus sylvestris. Annals of Botany 21:288313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, E. R. C. 1970. Root distribution and the cause of its spatial variability in Pseudotsuga taxifolia (poir.) Britt. Plant & Soil 32:501517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saurina, N. I. & Kameneckaja, I. V. 1969. The amount of roots of Pinus sylvestris in the pinetum hylocomioso-cladionosum of the southern Taiga Bjullenten Moskovskogo Obscestava Ispytatelej Prirody, Moskow 74:96100 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Shakova, O. V. 1976. Occupation of the soil by roots in the Pinetum Kland Betuletum kloxalidkoso-myrtillosum. Lesovedenie No. 1:8891 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Stark, N. & Sprat, M. 1977. Root biomass and nutrient storage in rain forest oxisols near San Carlos de Rio Negro. Tropical Ecology 18:19.Google Scholar
Suzuki, E. & Tagawa, H. 1983. Biomass of a mangrove forest and a sedge marsh on Ishigaki Island, south Japan. Japanese Journal of Ecology 33:231234.Google Scholar
Tabuchi, R., Ogino, K., Sabhasri, S. & Aksornkoae, S. 1983. Fine root amount of mangrove forest – a preliminary survey. Indian Journal of Plant Science 1:3141.Google Scholar
Wood, G. W. & Hutnick, R. J. 1972. Biomass, production and nutrient distribution in mixed-oak stands after clear cutting and fire. Research Briefs, School of Forest Resources, Pennsylvania State University 6:1821.Google Scholar
Yamada, I. & Shidei, T. 1968. On the root biomass in Cryptomeria stands. Bulletin of Kyoto University Forest 40:6780.Google Scholar
Yamakura, T., Saito, H. & Shidei, T. 1972. Production and structure of undergound part of Hinoki (Chamaecyparis obtusa) stand. 1. Estimation of root production by means of root analysis. Journal of the Japanese Forestry Society 54:118125.Google Scholar