Abstract

Balsam poplar seeds are short‐lived and require moist seedbeds soon after they are released to germinate. In addition to sexual reproduction, balsam poplar stands can regenerate clonally by root suckering. The origin of stands will in turn affect their genetic structure and root system architecture, which are poorly understood for upland forest stands. Three stands were hydraulically excavated in Quebec (moist) and Alberta (dry) to determine the origin of trees and to characterize root systems with respect to presence of parental roots and root grafts connections. Clones were identified using single‐nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs), and all stems, roots and root grafts were aged using dendrochronology techniques. All 82 excavated trees were of sucker origin, and four of the six stands contained a single clone. Parental root connections were found between 22% and 25% of excavated trees, and 53% and 48% of trees were linked with a root graft between the same or different clones, in Alberta and Quebec, respectively. Mean distance between trees connected by parental root was significantly lower than the distance between unconnected trees (0.47 ± 0.25 m vs. 3.14 ± 0.15 m and 1.55 ± 0.27 m vs. 4.25 ± 0.13 m) in Alberta and in Quebec, respectively. The excavations also revealed many dead stumps with live roots, maintained through root connections with live trees. This research highlights that balsam poplar growing in upland stands is a clonal species that can maintain relatively high genotypic diversity, with frequent root connections between trees at maturity. Maintaining an extensive root system through root connections increases the chances of a clone surviving when the above ground tree is dead and may also enhance the resilience of balsam poplar stands after disturbance.

Highlights

  • | INTRODUCTIONClonal growth directly affects the distribution of phenotypic and genetic variation within and among populations (Eckert, 1999)

  • Clonal growth directly affects the distribution of phenotypic and genetic variation within and among populations (Eckert, 1999).Knowledge of regeneration dynamics of a clonal species is essential to understand community structure and ecosystem functioning (Wilsey, 2002)

  • If we found roots older than its corresponding tree, those were labeled as parental roots and trees were determined to be from a sucker origin

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Clonal growth directly affects the distribution of phenotypic and genetic variation within and among populations (Eckert, 1999). Suckering can lead to the formation of extensive clones (Edwards & Dunwiddie, 1985) in which suckers may be interconnected by parental roots (DesRochers & Lieffers, 2001b) Such diverse mechanisms of regeneration (sexual and asexual) of the species after disturbance or clear cutting potentially have strong effects on the genetic structure and diversity of the species. Because balsam poplar seeds do not exhibit dormancy and germination occurs immediately on moist mineral sites (Zasada & Densmore, 1980), we hypothesized that (1) there would be more seedling recruitment in Quebec than in semiarid Alberta and (2) that as for aspen, most ramets of a given clone that have regenerated from the same parental root system would remain interconnected through mature stages of stand development

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
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