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Above- and below-ground biomass and its allometry of Salsola passerina shrub in Alxa steppe desert in NW China
  • Xiong-zhong Ma,
  • Xin-Ping Wang
Xiong-zhong Ma
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Corresponding Author:maxiongzhong@126.com

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Xin-Ping Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Abstract

Knowledge of the biomass allometry and partitioning is essential for understanding shrub adaptive strategies to extreme arid environments as well as for estimating organic carbon storage. We studied biomass accumulation, allocation patterns, and allometric models of Salsola passerina shrub in Alxa desert steppe, northwestern (NW) China. We measured above- and below-ground biomass accumulation across different ages (0-50 years) by destructive sampling. The biomass allocation patterns between aboveground biomass (MA), leaves (ML), branches (MB) and roots (MR) were studied by fitting allometric functions for both pooled and age-classed data. Allometric biomass models were developed by regressing on single-input variable of basal diameter (D), crown area (C), height (H), and age (A) alone or on the pairwise variables of above four parameters. Biomass accumulation increased with age, aboveground components represented 86–89% of the total biomass, root to shoot biomass ratios increased with shrub age. Allometry patterns of S. passerina is relatively constant, the growth rate of root was faster than that of aboveground components. Allometric models with two-input variables were obviously better than single variable models. C and D were the best predictors for biomass of S. passerina shrub.