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Journal ArticleDOI

A global analysis of root distributions for terrestrial biomes

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TLDR
Rooting patterns for terrestrial biomes are analyzed and distributions for various plant functional groups are compared and the merits and possible shortcomings of the analysis are discussed in the context of root biomass and root functioning.
Abstract
Understanding and predicting ecosystem functioning (e.g., carbon and water fluxes) and the role of soils in carbon storage requires an accurate assessment of plant rooting distributions. Here, in a comprehensive literature synthesis, we analyze rooting patterns for terrestrial biomes and compare distributions for various plant functional groups. We compiled a database of 250 root studies, subdividing suitable results into 11 biomes, and fitted the depth coefficient β to the data for each biome (Gale and Grigal 1987). β is a simple numerical index of rooting distribution based on the asymptotic equation Y=1-βd, where d = depth and Y = the proportion of roots from the surface to depth d. High values of β correspond to a greater proportion of roots with depth. Tundra, boreal forest, and temperate grasslands showed the shallowest rooting profiles (β=0.913, 0.943, and 0.943, respectively), with 80-90% of roots in the top 30 cm of soil; deserts and temperate coniferous forests showed the deepest profiles (β=0.975 and 0.976, respectively) and had only 50% of their roots in the upper 30 cm. Standing root biomass varied by over an order of magnitude across biomes, from approximately 0.2 to 5 kg m-2. Tropical evergreen forests had the highest root biomass (5 kg m-2), but other forest biomes and sclerophyllous shrublands were of similar magnitude. Root biomass for croplands, deserts, tundra and grasslands was below 1.5 kg m-2. Root/shoot (R/S) ratios were highest for tundra, grasslands, and cold deserts (ranging from 4 to 7); forest ecosystems and croplands had the lowest R/S ratios (approximately 0.1 to 0.5). Comparing data across biomes for plant functional groups, grasses had 44% of their roots in the top 10 cm of soil. (β=0.952), while shrubs had only 21% in the same depth increment (β=0.978). The rooting distribution of all temperate and tropical trees was β=0.970 with 26% of roots in the top 10 cm and 60% in the top 30 cm. Overall, the globally averaged root distribution for all ecosystems was β=0.966 (r 2=0.89) with approximately 30%, 50%, and 75% of roots in the top 10 cm, 20 cm, and 40 cm, respectively. We discuss the merits and possible shortcomings of our analysis in the context of root biomass and root functioning.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Root Distribution of Temperate Forage Species Subjected to Water and Nitrogen Stress

TL;DR: Comparing root distribution under uniform growing conditions for common grass, legume and non-leguminous forb species found in humidtemperate pastures of the northeast United States suggested that information from container-grown plants could provide insights into results, and inherent species differences in root distribution could explain some, but not all, rooting patterns observed in multi-species forage mixtures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of nitrogen and phosphorus stoichiometry among leaf, stem and root of desert plants and responses to climate and soil factors in Xinjiang, China

TL;DR: N and P stoichiometric characteristics of desert plant organs are provided and their relationships with environmental variables are explored to help understand nutrient stoichiometry patterns and utilization strategy of N and P and their potential responses to global climate changes in the desert ecosystems of central Asia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Be a Shrub? A Basic Model and Hypotheses for the Adaptive Values of a Common Growth Form

TL;DR: A novel model based on scaling relationships and four hypotheses to explain the adaptive significance of shrubs are presented, including a review of the literature with a test of one hypothesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards understanding tree root profiles: simulating hydrologically optimal strategies for root distribution

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated differences in vertical root distributions measured in four contrasting forest locations in the Netherlands were investigated using the soil hydrological model SWIF, and the results showed clear differences in optimal root distributions between the various sites and also between two model configurations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vegetation in karst terrain of southwestern China allocates more biomass to roots

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the root biomass of karst vegetation in five land cover types: grassland, grass-scrub tussock, thornscrub shrubland, scrub-tree forest, and mixed evergreen and deciduous forest in Maolan, southern Guizhou province, growing in two different soil-rich and rock-dominated habitats.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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