ISHS


Acta
Horticulturae
Home


Login
Logout
Status


Help

ISHS Home

ISHS Contact

Consultation
statistics
index


Search
 
ISHS Acta Horticulturae 1199: VIII International Olive Symposium

Importance of very fine roots in deep soil layers for the survival of rainfed olive trees

Authors:   N. Conceição, L. Tezza, S. Lourenço, M. Häusler, L. Boteta, C. Pacheco, M.I. Ferreira
Keywords:   Olea europaea, water use, water balance, survival strategies, drought
DOI:   10.17660/ActaHortic.2018.1199.9
Abstract:
In Portugal, traditional olive stands are usually rainfed, in spite of the hot and dry summers. Aiming to quantify water use versus water status and understanding survival strategies, in relation to summer water scarcity, an experiment was installed on a 20-year-old rainfed olive orchard (Olea europaea 'Cobrançosa'), planted in a square grid of 7 m, in a calcic Vertisol soil (profile ApBtCk) in southern Portugal (climate Csb, according to Köppen-Geiger classification). From mid-2010 to 2013, the convection fluxes of heat and water vapour, sap flow in stem and roots and water status in plants and soil were measured. This period included the driest winter since 1931 (2012), followed by the usual dry summer, allowing the analysis of plant behaviour under such extreme conditions. Trenches were opened down to 2.5 m, starting from below a tree, to analyse root distribution within the soil layers. We concluded that roots colonize the soil horizontally, with a homogenous distribution in solum horizons (Ap and Bt horizons), with abundant large, medium and fine roots. Large roots were absent below the solum, Ck horizons (0.7-3 m), presenting only fine (KLEINERDAN1 mm) and very fine roots. We report here measurements on volumetric water content in soil around 12 tubes (neutron scattering method), located in variable positions in relation to the trees. No water table existed down to 5 m; capillary rise could be considered null. In conducting these experiments, the temporal and spatial distribution of water uptake from the soil volume was analysed, confirming the direct observations above and providing insights into the great importance of very fine roots, and, in general, the “hidden half”, for plant survival.

Download Adobe Acrobat Reader (free software to read PDF files)

1199_8     1199     1199_10

URL www.actahort.org      Hosted by KU Leuven LIBIS      © ISHS