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TAMM review: Continuous root forestry—Living roots sustain the belowground ecosystem and soil carbon in managed forests

Forest Ecology and Management, ISSN: 0378-1127, Vol: 532, Page: 120848
2023
  • 25
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 73
    Captures
  • 4
    Mentions
  • 48
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    25
  • Captures
    73
  • Mentions
    4
    • News Mentions
      4
      • News
        4
  • Social Media
    48
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      48
      • Facebook
        48

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Review Description

An estimated half of the carbon fixed by trees is transported belowground, a portion of which is exuded into the soil where it fuels a complex belowground food web. The biological transformation of exudates into microbial metabolites and necromass is a major source of soil organic matter (SOM), including persistent mineral-associated organic matter (MAOM). Recent recognition of the fundamental importance of these inputs from living roots for sustaining life belowground and replenishing SOM demands a rethinking of how we harvest forests. By severing the lifeline of living roots, clearcut harvesting devastates much of the belowground biodiversity in forests, and prohibits a principal pathway through which SOM and C stocks are replenished. Retention harvesting retains the influence of living roots within retention patches and potentially throughout the harvested area, but only if inter-tree distances are 15 m or less. Retention trees sustain and support the re-establishment of belowground life and function following forest harvest and may mitigate post-harvest soil C losses. Sustaining the belowground ecosystem via inputs from living roots is an underappreciated benefit of continuous-cover and retention forestry.

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