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Aboveground architecture and biomass distribution of Quercus variabilis.

YU Bi-yun1, ZHANG Wen-hui1, HU Xiao-jing1,2, SHEN Jia-peng1, ZHEN Xue-yuan1, YANG Xiao-zhou1   

  1. (1Education of Ministry Key Laboratory of Environment and Ecology in West China, Northwest A&F University, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, China; 2College of Agriculture, Shihezi University, Shihezi 832000, Xinjiang, China)
  • Online:2015-08-18 Published:2015-08-18

Abstract: The aboveground architecture, biomass and its allocation, and the relationship between architecture and biomass of Quercus variabilis of different diameter classes in Shangluo, south slope of Qinling Mountains were researched. The results showed that differences existed in the aboveground architecture and biomass allocation of Q. variabilis of different diameter classes. With the increase of diameter class, tree height, DBH, and crown width increased gradually. The average decline rate of each diameter class increased firstly then decreased. Q. variabilis overall bifurcation ratio and stepwise bifurcation ratio increased then declined. The specific leaf areas of Q. variabilis of all different diameter classes at vertical direction were 0.02-0.03, and the larger values of leaf mass ratio, LAI and leaf area ratio at vertical direction in diameter level Ⅰ, Ⅱ, Ⅲ appeared in the middle and upper trunk, while in diameter level Ⅳ, Ⅴ, Ⅵ, they appeared in the central trunk, with the increase of diameter class, there appeared two peaks in vertical direction, which located in the lower and upper trunk. The trunk biomass accounted for 71.8%-88.4% of Q. variabilis aboveground biomass, while the branch biomass accounted for 5.8%-19.6%, and the leaf biomass accounted for 4.2%-8.6%. With the increase of diameter class, stem biomass proportion of Q. variabilis decreased firstly then increased, while the branch and leaf biomass proportion showed a trend that increased at first then decreased, and then increased again. The aboveground biomass of Q. variabilis was significantly positively correlated to tree height, DBH, crown width and stepwise bifurcation ratio (R2:1), and positively related to the overall bifurcation ratio and stepwise bifurcation ratio (R3:2), but there was no significant correlation. Trunk biomass and total biomass aboveground were negatively related to the trunk decline rate, while branch biomass and leaf biomass were positively related to trunk decline rate, but their correlations were all not significant.