2017
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00315
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Root Branching Is a Leading Root Trait of the Plant Economics Spectrum in Temperate Trees

Abstract: Global vegetation models use conceived relationships between functional traits to simulate ecosystem responses to environmental change. In this context, the concept of the leaf economics spectrum (LES) suggests coordinated leaf trait variation, and separates species which invest resources into short-lived leaves with a high expected energy return rate from species with longer-lived leaves and slower energy return. While it has been assumed that being fast (acquisitive) or slow (conservative) is a general featu… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(119 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(129 reference statements)
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“…Currently, plant ecologists seek to identify the multiple dimensions of fine‐root trait variation related to plant performance (LalibertĂ©, ; Liese, Alings, & Meier, ; Valverde‐Barrantes & Blackwood, ; Wang et al, ; Weemstra et al, ). This study demonstrates that fine‐root mass and length density—in combination with fine‐root life span—can represent an additional below‐ground dimension to capture species’ variation in performance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, plant ecologists seek to identify the multiple dimensions of fine‐root trait variation related to plant performance (LalibertĂ©, ; Liese, Alings, & Meier, ; Valverde‐Barrantes & Blackwood, ; Wang et al, ; Weemstra et al, ). This study demonstrates that fine‐root mass and length density—in combination with fine‐root life span—can represent an additional below‐ground dimension to capture species’ variation in performance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since this study aimed to highlight the relative contribution of microbial properties to the environmental processes, the measured root functional traits were assumed as good proxies of nutrient acquisition and different classes of root orders and diameter were not considered. Indeed, root biomass and SRL together reflect a plant's ability to prospect soil and take up nutrients (Craine, Wedin, Chapin, & Reich, ; Legay, Personeni, Slezack‐Deschaumes, Piutti, & Cliquet, ) and root N content is correlated with root branching, which is also a well‐established proxy of nutrient uptake potential (Liese, Alings, & Meier, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that resource uptake by roots can be optimized in multiple ways (Weemstra et al 2016), far more information on root traits is needed to capture the full range of root foraging strategies and constrain their perceived relationship with species dynamics. For example, having more information on associations with mycorrhizal fungi, fine-root architecture, fine-root life span, and phenology should enable future studies to more fully define strategies of resource allocation and acquisition (Bouda and Saiers 2017, Liese et al 2017. Moreover, the majority of currently available data pertain to fine roots pooled as all roots <2 mm, which mixes distal, absorptive roots that generally lack secondary development with roots primarily involved in resource transport; this muddies the functional application of root trait information.…”
Section: Looking Forwardmentioning
confidence: 99%