Linking absorptive roots and their functional traits with rhizosphere priming of tree species

2020 ◽  
Vol 150 ◽  
pp. 107997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liming Yin ◽  
Wen Xiao ◽  
Feike A. Dijkstra ◽  
Biao Zhu ◽  
Peng Wang ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
vivek pandi ◽  
Kanda Naveen Babu

Abstract The present study was carried out to analyse the leaf functional traits of co-occurring evergreen and deciduous tree species in a tropical dry scrub forest. This study also intended to check whether the species with contrasting leaf habits differ in their leaf trait plasticity, responding to the canopy-infestation by lianas. A total of 12 leaf functional traits were studied for eight tree species with contrasting leaf habits (evergreen and deciduous) and liana-colonization status (Liana+ and Liana−). In the liana-free environment (L−), evergreen trees had significantly higher specific leaf mass (LMA) and leaf dry matter content (LDMC) than the deciduous species. Whereas, the deciduous trees had higher specific leaf area (SLA) and mass-based leaf nitrogen concentration (Nmass). The leaf trait-pair relationship in the present study agreed to the well-established global trait-pair relationships (SLA Vs Nmass, Lth Vs SLA, Nmass Vs Lth, Nmass Vs LDMC, LDMC Vs SLA). There was no significant difference between L+ and L− individuals in any leaf functional traits studied in the deciduous species. However, evergreen species showed marked differences in the total chlorophyll content (Chlt), chlorophyll b (Chlb), SLA, and LMA between L+ and L− individuals of the same species. Deciduous species with the acquisitive strategy can have a competitive advantage over evergreen species in the exposed environment (L−) whereas, evergreen species with shade-tolerant properties were better acclimated to the shaded environments (L+). The result revealed the patterns of convergence and divergence in some of the leaf functional traits between evergreen and deciduous species. The results also showed the differential impact of liana colonization on the host trees with contrasting leaf habits. Therefore, liana colonization can significantly impact the C-fixation strategies of the host trees by altering their light environment. Further, the magnitude of such impact may vary among species of different leaf habits. The increased proliferation of lianas in the tropical forest canopies may pose a severe threat to the whole forest carbon assimilation rates.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryota Aoyagi ◽  
Kanehiro Kitayama

Abstract:In this study, we tested the hypothesis that functional traits associated with nutrient impoverishment contribute to enhancing shade-tolerance (survival at low light) for the juveniles of canopy tree species in Bornean rain forests. To test the hypothesis, survival and functional traits (biomass allocation, leaf dynamics and foliar nutrient concentration) were investigated as a function of light conditions for saplings of 13 species in three forests with different levels of nutrient availability. As predicted by the hypothesis, the species in the severely nutrient-poor site (a tropical heath forest on nutrient-poor soils) showed greater shade-tolerance (>91% survival for 8 mo at 5% global site factor) than in the other two sites (mixed dipterocarp forests) (54–87% survival). Across the species, greater shade-tolerance was associated with a higher biomass allocation to roots, a slower leaf production and a higher foliar C concentration, which are considered as C-conservation traits under nutrient impoverishment. These results suggest that the juveniles of the canopy species occurring on nutrient-poor soils can enhance shade-tolerance by the same mechanisms as the adaptation to nutrient impoverishments. Tree species in nutrient-poor environments may be selected for surviving also in shaded conditions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Aubin ◽  
A.D. Munson ◽  
F. Cardou ◽  
P.J. Burton ◽  
N. Isabel ◽  
...  

The integration of functional traits into vulnerability assessments is a promising approach to quantitatively capture differences in species sensitivity and adaptive capacity to climate change, allowing the refinement of tree species distribution models. In response to a clear need to identify traits that are responsive to climate change and applicable in a management context, we review the state of knowledge of the main mechanisms, and their associated traits, that underpin the ability of boreal and temperate tree species to persist and (or) shift their distribution in a changing climate. We aimed to determine whether current knowledge is sufficiently mature and available to be used effectively in vulnerability assessments. Marshalling recent conceptual advances and assessing data availability, our ultimate objective is to guide modellers and practitioners in finding and selecting sets of traits that can be used to capture differences in species’ ability to persist and migrate. While the physiological mechanisms that determine sensitivity to climate change are relatively well understood (e.g., drought-induced cavitation), many associated traits have not been systematically documented for North American trees and differences in methodology preclude their widespread integration into vulnerability assessments (e.g., xylem recovery capacity). In contrast, traits traditionally associated with the ability to migrate and withstand fire are generally well documented, but new key traits are emerging in the context of climate change that have not been as well characterized (e.g., age of optimum seed production). More generally, lack of knowledge surrounding the extent and patterns in intraspecific trait variation, as well as co-variation and interaction among traits, limit our ability to use this approach to assess tree adaptive capacity. We conclude by outlining research needs and potential strategies for the development of trait-based knowledge applicable in large-scale modelling efforts, sketching out important aspects of trait data organization that should be part of a coordinated effort by the forest science community.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santiago Vásquez ◽  
Juan Camilo Villegas

<p>Andean ecosystems exhibit a natural limitation in nutrients such as Phosphorus that, potentially, affect the entire ecosystem´s metabolism, function and resilience to environmental perturbation. Due to this limitation in the soil, atmospheric inputs via wet or dry deposition become a determinant source of nutrients to the ecosystems. In highly disturbed Andean forests, scattered trees that remain in the landscape after forest conversion into other land uses, have been designated as key structures due to the ecological functions they have relative to the area they occupy, allowing to improve the biophysical and biogeochemical conditions of the place. On a Landscape-scale, they modify spatial heterogeneity, and contribute ecological connectivity that helps plant species dispersal. Previous studies have demonstrated the importance of precipitation for nutrient inputs into forests where various tree species differ in their responses because of their specificity, trait configuration, and changes in plant community competitive hierarchies. However, few studies have quantified the response of functional traits for different species of trees, evaluating their ability to intercept and move phosphorus through the relationship with hydrological processes. We determined the interception and input of phosphorus into the ecosystem through the study of twenty individuals from five scattered tree species in a modified Andean landscape: Croton magdalenensis, Tibouchina lepidota, Vismia Baccifera, and Quercus humboldtii, which are dominant and native to the Northern Andes, as well as a common exotic species in the area Eucaliptus globulus, generally planted for timber. In all individuals, we measured functional traits that relate, and potentially explain rainfall interception, and quantified concentrations of phosphate PO4 in precipitation, throughfall, and stemflow in all individual trees for a group of 16 individual rain events that varied in their hydrological characteristics. In general, PO4 concentrations in precipitation were low, although variation associated with hydrological characteristics of precipitation (intensity, duration, magnitude and cumulative precipitation in the previous days) was generally observed. In most cases were concentrations of PO4 were observed in precipitation, throughfall and stemflow had similar concentrations in most trees, highlighting the potential role of these hydrological processes in redistributing nutrients into the root zone.  Notably, one particular species, Croton magdalenensis, a pioneer species that generally dominates early forest recovery in disturbed areas, had significantly higher values of PO4 concentration in throughflow and stemflow compared to concentration in oncoming precipitation, as well as in the same fluxes on the other species. This condition potentially results from a particularly higher epiphyte load in these trees, which potentially facilitate biogeochemical exchange and enhances ecological functions associated with early stages of forest recovery.  Overall, our results highlight the complex biogeochemical interactions that occur in these highly biodiverse ecosystems where plant functional traits can be useful to describe ecosystem function at the landscape scale.  More generally, our results can be useful for restoration processes where ecosystem function, and particularly biogeochemical processes related to limiting nutrients (such as Phosphorous), need to be prioritized.</p><p><strong>Keywords: </strong>precipitation, phosphorus interception, nutrients limitation, scattered tree, functional traits.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Yang ◽  
Xiuqin Ci ◽  
Mengmeng Lu ◽  
Guocheng Zhang ◽  
Min Cao ◽  
...  

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