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Dr. Alex Shigo
Part 1 |
Part 2 | Part 3 |
Part 4
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A mycorrhiza back-lit to show the fungus
hyphae extending out from the organ. This is the world of the
rhizosphere.
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Microorganisms compete in the rhizosphere, an area rich in
exudates from the tree. The exudates contain carbohydrates, organic acids,
vitamins and many other substances essential for life. From 5 percent to
40 percent of the total dry matter production of organic carbon from
photosynthesis may be released as exudates! When trees begin to decline,
the amount of organic carbon released as exudates increases. Mineral
deficiencies, low amounts of soil air and severe wounding are major causes
for the increase. Another way to say this is that an increase in exudates
would be caused by over-pruning, construction injury, planting too deeply,
over-watering, compaction and planting trees in soils that have a pH too
high or too low for their optimal growth.
You would think that a tree in decline would decrease not
increase exudates. A possible explanation might come from the
self-thinning rule of ecology, which states that when energy input into a
site equals output, there will be no further growth unless some trees die.
As many suppressed trees die, a much fewer number continue to grow bigger.
Simple. Or, on the basis of the mass-energy ratio law, as some trees on a
site get bigger, many smaller suppressed trees will die. As the suppressed
trees decline, they contribute a higher percentage of their soluble
carbohydrates to the rhizosphere.
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Mycorrhizae form when mycorrhizal fungi infect
newly forming non-woody roots as shown here. Note the tube-like
structure of the hyphae.
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The increase in exudates from a declining tree with a
defense system weakened by low energy reserves would give root pathogens
an advantage over other soil organisms. When the tree dies, its dead wood
adds a great amount of carbon to the soil, thus benefiting all soil
organisms. If this scenario is correct, then the codes for the increase of
exudates as trees decline would have been set in the genes of the forest
trees. Then, even after trees are taken out of their groups in forests and
planted as individuals, the genetic codes for increasing exudates as the
tree declines for reasons other than crowding would still be in effect.
A tree does not "know" why it is dying. In a
crowded, young, growing forest, the self-thinning rule of ecology does
benefit tree survivors and all soil organisms. But, when one or two trees
in a yard, city or park start to decline, their early death may benefit
only the root pathogens. And even worse, since the tree will be cut and
removed from the site, there would be no benefits from added carbon to the
soil.
Part 1 -
Rhizosphere Wars
Part 2 - Energy and Root Exudates
Part 3 - A Closer Look
at Roots
Part 4 - It Does Not
Take Much to Disrupt Them
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