Effects of vegetation on properties of sandy soils in central Alberta

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Abstract

It was hypothesized that topographic location, fire, species characteristics, and soil texture interacted to maintain stable vegetation patterns on the landscape. As a corollary, relationships would exist between specific vegetation and profile development patterns, they would not be masked by secondary succession, and they would explain the distribution of both plant communities and soil types in the landscape. This hypothesis was tested in a study of soils and vegetation at eight sites representing three forest types (pine/lichen; closed canopy jack pine; white spruce) on sand ridges near the town of Slave Lake, Alberta. -from Authors

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Fyles, J. W., & McGill, W. B. (1988). Effects of vegetation on properties of sandy soils in central Alberta. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 68(2), 381–394. https://doi.org/10.4141/cjss88-035

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