Q. How deep are plant roots?
Plant roots vary in depth from less than 12 inches to more than three feet. Large trees are watered to the deepest roots get water (guessing its three feet). Citation is lost. |
A. It depends on the size of the
plant. This is because the roots of plants extend beyond their drip line. Roots
of plants have the potential of growing anywhere under a plants canopy. When a
plant is surrounded by dry soil, applied irrigation is very important for root
growth. So is air. Roots must “breathe”. If you visually lay a plant on its
side spin a circle with it, that will roughly describe where its roots can grow
when there is plenty of rain. That is not true in the desert. Even tall lawn
grasses have shorter roots if they are watered and then mowed closer to the
soil.
The
functions of roots are not just to supply the top of the plant with water, but
this plant must stay upright and resist the pushing by wind. This is one reason
why tall plants have water that’s applied deeper than shorter plants.
If
the plant is small, water it only to 12 inches. Small plants don’t need as much
support and the water travels smaller distances. Large trees and shrubs are
watered as deep as 24 to 36 inches! Their roots must carry water a lot further as
well as keep these big plants upright under their weight and in the wind. The
water they need is applied to the soil deeper than when watering short plants. They
need deep watering because the soil under the roots is dry. Deep roots are
needed as the tree gets bigger because of its ever-increasing canopy size and
weight.
The
taller the plant the deeper are the plant’s roots needed for transporting water
and support.
As
plants get larger, they need an increasing number of the same drip emitters to
apply water to the soil. By adding more drip emitters, you can keep the minutes
the same. With very large trees and shrubs at some point you may need to
increase the size of the emitters, as well as their numbers, to keep the
minutes the same.
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