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The role of trees in the geomorphic system of forested hillslopes - A review

期刊

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
卷 126, 期 -, 页码 250-265

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.08.007

关键词

Tree; Hillslope; Biomechanical weathering; Biochemical weathering; Tree uprooting; Biotransport

资金

  1. [NN306032940]

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Forested hillslopes form a special geoecosystem, an environment of geomorphic processes that depend strongly on forest ecology, including the growth and decay of trees, changes in structure, disturbances and other fluctuations. Hence, the following various functions of trees are reviewed here: their role in both biomechanical and biochemical weathering, as well as their importance for the hillslope geomorphic subsystem and for transport of soil material via tree uprooting and root growth. Special attention is paid to tree uprooting, a process considered the most efficient and most frequent biogeomorphological indicator of bio-physical activity within forest in complex terrain. Trees have varied implications for soil formation in different environments (boreal to tropical forests) and altitudes. In this paper an attempt has been made to emphasize how trees not only modulate geomorphic processes, but also how they act as a direct or indirect agent of microrelief formation, the most striking example of which being widespread and long-lasting pit-and-mound microtopography. Based on the analyzed literature it seems that some problems attributed to forest ecology can have a fundamental effect on forested hillslope dynamics, a relationship which points to the need for its integration and interpretation within the field of geomorphology. The biology of individual trees has a key influence on the development of e.g. rock faces, weathering front migration and changes in the soil biomantle within upper and lower forest belts. Additionally, forms and sediments depend largely on the horizontal and vertical extent, volume and structure of root systems, as well as on active processes taking place in the root zone and rhizosphere. Furthermore, although trees to a large extent stabilize slope surfaces, their presence can also have a dual effect on slope stability due to tree uprooting, a process which in some circumstances can trigger mass movements (e.g. debris avalanches). So far, several attempts at quantifying the influence of trees on slopes have been made via the use of mathematical equations, enabling researchers to calculate: 1) the root plate volume of uprooted trees, 2) the amount of soil displacement due to tree root growth, and 3) rates of erosion, sedimentation and soil creep. In light of the reviewed literature, the most urgent issue appears to be the need for a thorough study of the interactions and feedbacks occurring between trees and geomorphic systems (e.g. soil mixing and biotransport by trees) in different climate zones, altitudes and time frames, especially in terms of the development of forest ecosystems during the Holocene. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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