Abstract
To understand the spatial structure of monospecific Tugai forests (Xinjiang Province, China) growing as gallery woods nourished by ground water, root suckering in Populus euphratica was studied by a combination of morphological and molecular analyses. Seedlings grow a deep tap root and keep this as adult trees, whereas root suckers never develop a tap root but utilize the horizontally stretching root of their parent trees. The resulting reverse “T” root architecture distinguishes reliably even adult root suckers from generatively grown trees. Due to assimilate input from the root sucker, the distal root (pointing away from the parent tree) becomes thicker soon than its proximal root, which allows determination of the direction of vegetative growth. One stand including 279 young trees germinated from seeds and 267 root suckers was mapped completely, and selected suckers were assigned to parent trees by genotyping with microsatellite DNA. Root suckers develop up to 40 m away from parent trees on horizontal “spacer” roots, usually originating not deeper than 20 cm below surface. Trees begin with root suckering between 10 and 15 years, shortly before reaching flowering age. Cutting experiments indicated reduced survival of young root suckers disconnected from the parent tree. Without a tap root and with a rooting point close to the surface, declining ground water levels should lower the fitness of root suckers even more than that of generatively grown trees.
Published Version
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