Date of Award
Fall 1994
Document Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Science (MS)
Department
Biological Sciences
Program/Concentration
Biology
Committee Director
Frank P. Day, Jr.
Committee Member
Gerald Levy
Committee Member
Kneeland Nesius
Call Number for Print
Special Collections LD4331.B46 W428
Abstract
Little work has been done on the phenology of root growth and senescence largely due to methodological difficulties. The application of minirhizotron technology has enabled the tracking of individual roots through an entire growing season. As a result, direct measures of turnover, root growth, and an analysis of cohorts were made. Small plots on a 36 year old dune on Hog Island, a barrier island in the Virginia Coast Reserve Long Term Ecological Research Site, were fertilized with nitrogen. Minirhizotron tubes were installed in each fertilized and control plot. Each tube was sampled monthly for nine months, March through October of 1992. Root length density increased throughout the growing season with the highest root length density in the top 0-20 cm of the soil profile. The fertilized plots had higher root length densities (14.05 mm cm-2) than the unfertilized plots (2.88 mm cm-2). The turnover was higher in the unfertilized plots only in the top 0-20 cm of the soil profile (fertilized = 0.020 percent loss per day, unfertilized 0.024 percent loss per day). The cohort analysis found that the largest loss of roots for a cohort occurs within the first month. There was also a decline in root loss in the last sampling of the last cohort potentially indicating the roots were preparing for the winter months. The overall low turnover rate, the decreased turnover rate with fertilization and the decreased turnover in the last cohort imply that roots tend to be conserved in this nutrient poor system.
Rights
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DOI
10.25777/r4tc-ty51
Recommended Citation
Weber, Everett P..
"The Effect of Nitrogen Fertilization on the Phenology of Roots in a Barrier Island Sand Dune Community"
(1994). Master of Science (MS), Thesis, Biological Sciences, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/r4tc-ty51
https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/biology_etds/305