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Soil compaction at tree-planting sites in urban Hong Kong

Reference Type
Conference Proceedings (Chapter)

"Various soil limitations commonly influence the performance of landscape plants in cities, with physical problems often neglected. This study evaluates the compaction of soils at tree sites in urban Hong Kong at both roadside and park habitats. Field and the laboratory studies evaluated selected physical properties of 100 samples, including structure, texture, consistence, bulk density, and porosity. A large proportion of the soils are excessively coarse textured and stony, with widespread structural degradation and compaction. Two-fifths of the samples have bulk densities above the 1.6 Mg/m3 threshold, with some exceeding 2 Mg/m3. An increase in particle packing results in collapse of interstitial voids and shifts in pore-size distribution. The causes and consequences of compaction are discussed in relation to tree growth. The findings indicate an association between soil texture and compaction, with the sandy nature of the soils checking the extent of compaction and its negative impacts on root development. The results yield useful management implications for adoption in the local urban tree program." [Abstract]

 

[San Francisco, Mar. 5-6, 1998]


Authors
C.Y. Jim
Date Published
1998
Journal/Conference
The landscape below ground II: proceedings of a second international workshop on tree root development in urban soils
Editor
D. Neely, G. Watson
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
Publisher Location
Champaign, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
NA
Start Page
166
End Page
178
Pages
9
Sub-Topics
Planting, Compaction
State(s)/Region(s)
Asia, China
Keywords
Hong Kong, Planting, Soil compaction, Soil physical properties
Libraries
SO:9200-003; UMN

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