A method for extracting plant roots from soil which facilitates rapid sample processing without compromising measurement accuracy.
New Phytol
; 174(3): 697-703, 2007.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-17447923
This study evaluates a novel method for extracting roots from soil samples and applies it to estimate standing crop root mass (+/- confidence intervals) in an eastern Amazon rainforest. Roots were manually extracted from soil cores over a period of 40 min, which was split into 10 min time intervals. The pattern of cumulative extraction over time was used to predict root extraction beyond 40 min. A maximum-likelihood approach was used to calculate confidence intervals. The temporal prediction method added 21-32% to initial estimates of standing crop root mass. According to predictions, complete manual root extraction from 18 samples would have taken c. 239 h, compared with 12 h using the prediction method. Uncertainties (percentage difference between mean, and 10th and 90th percentiles) introduced by the prediction method were small (12-15%), compared with uncertainties caused by spatial variation in root mass (72-191%, for nine samples per plot surveyed). This method provides a way of increasing the number of root samples processed per unit time, without compromising measurement accuracy.
Texto completo:
1
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Plantas
/
Suelo
/
Manejo de Especímenes
/
Raíces de Plantas
Tipo de estudio:
Evaluation_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
País como asunto:
America do sul
Idioma:
En
Año:
2007
Tipo del documento:
Article