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- Title
Root characteristics of tea [Camellia sinensis (L.) O. Kuntze] and silver oak [Grevillea robusta (A. Cunn)] in a mixed tea plantation at Munnar, Kerala.
- Authors
Niranjana, K. S.; Viswanath, S.
- Abstract
Rooting characteristics of tea (Camellia sinensis) and silver oak (Grevillea robusta) were evaluated in a mixed plantation of these species in the Western Ghats in Munnar, Kerala employing three techniques viz., root excavation, measurement of starch concentration, and root cation exchange capacity (CEC) determination. Root systems of three representative trees of G. robusta and three tea bushes were exposed by systematically removing the soil both in the vertical and horizontal planes. While a majority of tea feeder roots (47%) were found in the surface (0 to 22.5 cm) and sub-surface (22.5 to 45.0 cm) layers of the soil, G. robusta had only a relatively smaller proportion (33%) of their fine roots in these layers. The feeder roots of G. robusta (67%) were mostly found in the soil layers below 45 cm implying complementarity in resource use by tea and G. robusta. G. robusta roots also penetrated deeper into the soil profile (2.4 m) compared to that of tea bushes, which were confined within a limit of 1.5 m. Starch concentrations of coarse roots (> 2 mm diameter) of G. robusta and tea, analyzed at monthly intervals as a measure of nutrient demand, suggest that G. robusta had lower starch levels than tea roots and an inverse relationship existed between the two species. G. robusta trees, however, had higher root CEC than tea plants, which again signifies that interspecific competition for plant nutrients like N and K in such systems, may not be substantial.
- Subjects
KERALA (India); INDIA; PLANT nutrients; PLANT roots; TEA; GREVILLEA robusta
- Publication
Journal of Tropical Agriculture, 2008, Vol 46, p25
- ISSN
0971-636X
- Publication type
Article