scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

TRY - a global database of plant traits

Jens Kattge, +136 more
- Vol. 17, Iss: 9, pp 2905-2935
TLDR
TRY as discussed by the authors is a global database of plant traits, including morphological, anatomical, physiological, biochemical and phenological characteristics of plants and their organs, which can be used for a wide range of research from evolutionary biology, community and functional ecology to biogeography.
Abstract
Plant traits – the morphological, anatomical, physiological, biochemical and phenological characteristics of plants and their organs – determine how primary producers respond to environmental factors, affect other trophic levels, influence ecosystem processes and services and provide a link from species richness to ecosystem functional diversity. Trait data thus represent the raw material for a wide range of research from evolutionary biology, community and functional ecology to biogeography. Here we present the global database initiative named TRY, which has united a wide range of the plant trait research community worldwide and gained an unprecedented buy-in of trait data: so far 93 trait databases have been contributed. The data repository currently contains almost three million trait entries for 69 000 out of the world's 300 000 plant species, with a focus on 52 groups of traits characterizing the vegetative and regeneration stages of the plant life cycle, including growth, dispersal, establishment and persistence. A first data analysis shows that most plant traits are approximately log-normally distributed, with widely differing ranges of variation across traits. Most trait variation is between species (interspecific), but significant intraspecific variation is also documented, up to 40% of the overall variation. Plant functional types (PFTs), as commonly used in vegetation models, capture a substantial fraction of the observed variation – but for several traits most variation occurs within PFTs, up to 75% of the overall variation. In the context of vegetation models these traits would better be represented by state variables rather than fixed parameter values. The improved availability of plant trait data in the unified global database is expected to support a paradigm shift from species to trait-based ecology, offer new opportunities for synthetic plant trait research and enable a more realistic and empirically grounded representation of terrestrial vegetation in Earth system models.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant trait variation along environmental indicators to infer global change impacts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed a sample of 1095 plant species from Northern Italy, also characteristic of Southern European vegetation, and found that inter-specific plant trait variation at the regional scale should match axes of plant adaptation highlighted by the global spectrum, and that plant trait-environmental associations should be evident over ranges of environmental indicators corresponding to key drivers of future climate and land use changes in Southern Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Remove or retain: ecosystem effects of woody encroachment and removal are linked to plant structural and functional traits

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the ecosystem consequences of encroachment and removal are closely linked to the structural and functional traits of the target woody species and biotic and abiotic factors have different impacts on regulating trade-offs between ecosystem responses under these two management scenarios.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biome diversity in South Asia - How can we improve vegetation models to understand global change impact at regional level?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the current state of vegetation modeling for South Asia and propose a research agenda for an improved representation of biome diversity in Dynamic Global Vegetation Models (DGVMs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil fauna responses to invasive alien plants are determined by trophic groups and habitat structure: a global meta‐analysis

TL;DR: The findings support the conclusions of previous studies on the subject by demonstrating that soil fauna abundance is impacted by biological invasions, that initial habitat structure has a strong influence on the outcome and that responses within the soil f flora differ between trophic levels with a stronger response of primary consumers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infrastructures of systems biology that facilitate functional genomic study in rice

TL;DR: This review summarizes current resources, such as databases and tools, for systems biology in rice using six omics levels: genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, integrated omics, and functional genomics.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A Biochemical Model of Photosynthetic CO 2 Assimilation in Leaves of C 3 Species

TL;DR: Various aspects of the biochemistry of photosynthetic carbon assimilation in C3 plants are integrated into a form compatible with studies of gas exchange in leaves.
Journal ArticleDOI

The worldwide leaf economics spectrum

TL;DR: Reliable quantification of the leaf economics spectrum and its interaction with climate will prove valuable for modelling nutrient fluxes and vegetation boundaries under changing land-use and climate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory

TL;DR: A triangular model based upon the three strategies of evolution in plants may be reconciled with the theory of r- and K-selection, provides an insight into the processes of vegetation succession and dominance, and appears to be capable of extension to fungi and to animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rebuilding community ecology from functional traits.

TL;DR: It is asserted that community ecology should return to an emphasis on four themes that are tied together by a two-step process: how the fundamental niche is governed by functional traits within the context of abiotic environmental gradients; and how the interaction between traits and fundamental niches maps onto the realized niche in the context a biotic interaction milieu.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient tests for normality, homoscedasticity and serial independence of regression residuals

TL;DR: In this paper, the Lagrange multiplier procedure is used to derive efficient joint tests for residual normality, homoscedasticity and serial independence, which are simple to compute and asymptotically distributed as χ2.
Related Papers (5)