Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4380567 Acta Ecologica Sinica 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A wastewater culture system was designed to study the root growth of eight species of wetland plants with two different root types. The system included a plastic barrel for holding the wastewater and a foam plate for holding the plant. The results indicated that the root growth of the plants with fibril roots was faster than that of the plants with rhizomatic roots. The species with fibril roots had higher root number (1349 per plant) than species with rhizomatic roots (549 per plant) after ten weeks of cultivation. The average root biomass of plants with fibril roots was 11.3 g per plant, whereas that of plants with rhizomatic roots was 7.4 g per plant. Fine root biomass of diameter ≤ 1 mm constituted 51.9% of the total root biomass in plants with fibril roots, whereas it accounted for only 25.1% in plants with rhizomatic roots. The root surface area of the plants with fibril roots (6933 cm2 per plant) was markedly larger than that of the species with rhizomatic roots (1897 cm2 per plant). The species with rhizomatic roots showed a longer root lifespan (46.6 days) than those with fibril roots (34.8 days).

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