Relationships between stem diameter, sapwood area, leaf area and transpiration in a young mountain ash forest
1995; Oxford University Press; Volume: 15; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1093/treephys/15.9.559
ISSN1758-4469
AutoresRob Vertessy, Richard G. Benyon, S. K. O'Sullivan, P. R. Gribben,
Tópico(s)Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
ResumoWe examined relationships between stem diameter, sapwood area, leaf area and transpiration in a 15-year-old mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F. Muell.) forest containing silver wattle (Acacia dealbata Link.) as a suppressed overstory species and mountain hickory (Acacia frigescens J.H. Willis) as an understory species. Stem diameter explained 93% of the variation in leaf area, 96% of the variation in sapwood area and 88% of the variation in mean daily spring transpiration in 19 mountain ash trees. In seven silver wattle trees, stem diameter explained 87% of the variation in sapwood area but was a poor predictor of the other variables. When transpiration measurements from individual trees were scaled up to a plot basis, using stem diameter values for 164 mountain ash trees and 124 silver wattle trees, mean daily spring transpiration rates of the two species were 2.3 and 0.6 mm day(-1), respectively. The leaf area index of the plot was estimated directly by destructive sampling, and indirectly with an LAI-2000 plant canopy analyzer and by hemispherical canopy photography. All three methods gave similar results.
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