Article ID: | iaor201113460 |
Volume: | 83 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 321 |
End Page Number: | 330 |
Publication Date: | Nov 2011 |
Journal: | Agroforestry Systems |
Authors: | Bergeron Mlanie, Lacombe Simon, Bradley Robert, Whalen Joann, Cogliastro A, Jutras Marie-France, Arp Paul |
Keywords: | yield management, statistics: inference, ecology |
Tree‐based intercropping (TBI) systems, combining agricultural alley crops with rows of hardwood trees, are largely absent in Canada. We tested the hypothesis that the roots of 5–8 years old hybrid poplars, growing in two TBI systems in southern Québec, would play a ‘safety‐net’ role of capturing nutrients leaching below the rooting zone of alley crops. TBI research plots at each site were trenched to a depth of 1 m on each side of an alley. Control plots were left with tree roots intact. In each treatment at each site, leachate at 70 cm soil depth was repeatedly sampled over two growing seasons using porous cup tension lysimeters, and analyzed for nutrient concentrations. Daily water percolation rates were estimated with the forest hydrology model ForHyM. Average nutrient concentrations for all days between consecutive sampling dates were multiplied by water percolation rates, yielding daily nutrient leaching loss estimates for each sampling step. We estimated that tree roots in the TBI system established on clay loam soil decreased subsoil NO