Literature DB >> 31323118

Plants alter their vertical root distribution rather than biomass allocation in response to changing precipitation.

Bingwei Zhang1,2,3, Marc W Cadotte4, Shiping Chen2,3, Xingru Tan2,3, Cuihai You2,3, Tingting Ren2,3, Minling Chen5, Shanshan Wang2, Weijing Li2, Chengjin Chu1, Lin Jiang6, Yongfei Bai2,3, Jianhui Huang2,3, Xingguo Han2,3.   

Abstract

Elucidating the variation of allocation pattern of ecosystem net primary productivity (NPP) and its underlying mechanisms is critically important for understanding the changes of aboveground and belowground ecosystem functions. Under optimal partitioning theory, plants should allocate more NPP to the organ that acquires the most limiting resource, and this expectation has been widely used to explain and predict NPP allocation under changing precipitation. However, confirmatory evidence for this theory has mostly come from observed spatial variation in the relationship between precipitation and NPP allocation across ecosystems, rather than directly from the influences of changing precipitation on NPP allocation within systems. We performed a 6-yr five-level precipitation manipulation experiment in a semiarid steppe to test whether changes in NPP allocation can be explained by the optimal partitioning theory, and how water requirement of plant community is maintained if NPP allocation is unaltered. The 30 precipitation levels (5 levels × 6 yr) were divided into dry, nominal, and wet precipitation ranges, relative to historical precipitation variation over the past six decades. We found that NPP in both aboveground (ANPP) and belowground (BNPP) increased nonlinearly as precipitation increased, while the allocation of NPP to BNPP (fBNPP ) showed a concave quadratic relationship with precipitation. The declined fBNPP as precipitation increased in the dry range supported the optimal partitioning theory. However, in the nominal range, NPP allocation was not influenced by the changed precipitation; instead, BNPP was distributed more in the surface soil horizon (0-10 cm) as precipitation increased, and conversely more in the deeper soil layers (10-30 cm) as precipitation decreased. This response in root foraging appears to be a strategy to satisfy plant water requirements and partially explains the stable NPP allocation patterns. Overall, our results suggest that plants can adjust their vertical BNPP distribution in response to drought stress, and that only under extreme drought does the optimal partitioning theory strictly apply, highlighting the context dependency of the adaption and growth of plants under changing precipitation.
© 2019 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  allocation; optimal biomass partitioning theory; precipitation change; semiarid steppe; species reordering; vertical root distribution

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31323118     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2828

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  3 in total

1.  Combined effects of warming and drought on plant biomass depend on plant woodiness and community type: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Rutger A Wilschut; Jonathan R De Long; Stefan Geisen; S Emilia Hannula; Casper W Quist; Basten Snoek; Katja Steinauer; E R Jasper Wubs; Qiang Yang; Madhav P Thakur
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-10-05       Impact factor: 5.530

2.  Drought of early time in growing season decreases community aboveground biomass, but increases belowground biomass in a desert steppe.

Authors:  Xiangyun Li; Xiaoan Zuo; Ping Yue; Xueyong Zhao; Ya Hu; Xinxin Guo; Aixia Guo; Chong Xu; Qiang Yu
Journal:  BMC Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-06-01

3.  Nitrogen Fertilizer Levels Affect the Growth and Quality Parameters of Astragalus mongolica.

Authors:  Lingling Wang; Lucun Yang; Feng Xiong; Xiuqing Nie; Changbin Li; Yuanming Xiao; Guoying Zhou
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-01-16       Impact factor: 4.411

  3 in total

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