» Articles » PMID: 24824672

Leading Dimensions in Absorptive Root Trait Variation Across 96 Subtropical Forest Species

Overview
Journal New Phytol
Specialty Biology
Date 2014 May 15
PMID 24824672
Citations 84
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Absorptive root traits show remarkable cross-species variation, but major root trait dimensions across species have not been defined. We sampled first-order roots and measured 14 root traits for 96 angiosperm woody species from subtropical China, including root diameter, specific root length, stele diameter, cortex thickness, root vessel size and density, mycorrhizal colonization rate, root branching intensity, tissue density, and concentrations of carbon and nitrogen ([N]). Root traits differed in the degree of variation and phylogenetic conservatism, but showed predictable patterns of cross-trait coordination. Root diameter, cortex thickness and stele diameter displayed high variation across species (coefficient of variation (CV)=0.51-0.69), whereas the stele:root diameter ratio and [N] showed low variation (CV<0.32). Root diameter, cortex thickness and stele diameter showed a strong phylogenetic signal across species, whereas root branching traits did not, and these two sets of traits were segregated onto two nearly orthogonal (independent) principal component analysis (PCA) axes. Two major dimensions of root trait variation were found: a diameter-related dimension potentially integrating root construction, maintenance, and persistence with mycorrhizal colonization, and a branching architecture dimension expressing root plastic responses to the environment. These two dimensions may offer a promising path for better understanding root trait economics and root ecological strategies world-wide.

Citing Articles

Mixed Ammonium-Nitrate Nutrition Regulates Enzymes, Gene Expression, and Metabolic Pathways to Improve Nitrogen Uptake, Partitioning, and Utilization Efficiency in Rice.

Fan X, Lu C, Khan Z, Li Z, Duan S, Shen H Plants (Basel). 2025; 14(4).

PMID: 40006870 PMC: 11859190. DOI: 10.3390/plants14040611.


Arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization defines root ecological strategies in an extreme arid environment.

Delpiano C, Rios R, Barraza-Zepeda C, Pozo M, Aguilera L, Loayza A Front Plant Sci. 2025; 15:1488383.

PMID: 39881730 PMC: 11774874. DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1488383.


Leaf and Root Functional Traits of Woody and Herbaceous Halophytes and Their Adaptations in the Yellow River Delta.

Wang Y, Wu H, Wang J, Mu L, Li Z Plants (Basel). 2025; 14(2).

PMID: 39861513 PMC: 11768499. DOI: 10.3390/plants14020159.


Plant Species Richness and the Root Economics Space Drive Soil Fungal Communities.

Hennecke J, Bassi L, Albracht C, Amyntas A, Bergmann J, Eisenhauer N Ecol Lett. 2024; 28(1):e70032.

PMID: 39737799 PMC: 11687415. DOI: 10.1111/ele.70032.


Discrepancy in coordination and variation of root and leaf traits among herbaceous and shrub species in the desert, China.

Ma J, Wang T, Wang H, Chen Y, Yang J, Xie T Front Plant Sci. 2024; 15:1485542.

PMID: 39600905 PMC: 11589817. DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1485542.