Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5781169 Geomorphology 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
Overall, the sampled trees possessed extremely complex three-dimensional buried wood structures that permeate bank sediments and tie the tree and aggraded bank sediments to basal gravels. These properties and the considerable amount of underground wood that is present have great significance for anchoring trees and giving uprooted trees and root wads a propensity to snag once they enter the fluvial system. Furthermore, the ability of this underground biomass to sprout suggests that uprooted and remaining components of root networks following tree uprooting may resprout, generating new vegetation canopies that can trap mobile wood. Overall, this underground wood offers many traits that may tighten wood budgets, and it is likely that other riparian Salicaceae species with similar traits may have similar wood budget impacts.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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