The effect of soil disturbance on growth and ectomycorrhizae of Douglas-fir and western hemlock seedlings: a greenhouse bioassay
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Forest Research
- Vol. 12 (2) , 343-353
- https://doi.org/10.1139/x82-050
Abstract
In a greenhouse bioassay of soils from the central Oregon Cascades, Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) seedlings had the most total and ectomycorrhizal root tips when grown in soil from an unburned clear-cut and the least when grown in soil from (i) a 20-year-old plantation that had been clear-cut and burned in the late 1950's and (ii) one old-growth forest. Tip formation was intermediate in soil from a second old-growth forest, a recently burned clear-cut, and a 40-year-old natural burn. Root weights followed the same trend, but top weights did not differ among the various soils. Ectomycorrhizal and total root tips of western hemlock (Tsugaheterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) were lowest in soils from the plantation and recently burned clear-cut. Unlike Douglas-fir, western hemlock's tip production was not greater in the unburned clear-cut than in the old-growth forest soils. In this species, both top and root weights varied according to soil, with the largest seedlings produced in soil from the unburned clear-cut. With both species, there was a significant interaction between ectomycorrhizal type and soil type. Cenococcumgeophilum Fr. predominated on western hemlock and was reduced in soils from the burned clear-cut and plantation. In comparison with the mean for all soils, ectomycorrhizal types that predominated on Douglas-fir were enhanced in the unburned clear-cut soil and reduced in one old-growth soil, an effect apparently related to litter leachate.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clearcut harvesting and ectomycorrhizae: survival of activity on residual roots and influence on a bordering forest stand in western MontanaCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 1980
- Partial cut harvesting and ectomycorrhizae: early effects in Douglas-fir-larch forests of western MontanaCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 1980
- Anatomy of Seedling Roots of Pseudotsuga menziesiiAmerican Journal of Botany, 1965