Abstract
Coarse root systems of four different fruit tree species from southern Africa were completely excavated and semi-automatically digitized. Spatial distributions of root length were determined from the digitally-reconstructed branching systems. Furthermore, the fractal characteristic of the coarse root systems was shown by determining the box-counting dimensions. These quantitative methods revealed architectural differences between the species, probably due to different ecophysiological strategies. For fine root samples, which were taken before digging out the whole systems, fractal analysis of the planar projections showed no significant inter-species differences. Methodologically, the study underlines the usefulness of digital 3-D reconstruction in root research.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Oppelta, A. L., Kurth, W., Dzierzon, H., Jentschke, G., & Godbold, D. L. (2000). Structure and fractal dimensions of root systems of four co-occurring fruit tree species from botswana. In Annals of Forest Science (Vol. 57, pp. 463–475). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/forest:2000135
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.