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Dryad

Data from: Different phylogenetic and environmental controls of first-order root morphological and nutrient traits: evidence of multidimensional root traits

Cite this dataset

Wang, Ruili et al. (2018). Data from: Different phylogenetic and environmental controls of first-order root morphological and nutrient traits: evidence of multidimensional root traits [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3rj81

Abstract

1. Although fine roots are essential for the water and nutrient uptake of plants, there is limited understanding of root trait variation and the underlying mechanism. 2. Here, six first-order root morphological and chemical traits were measured for 181 species from eight subtropical and boreal forests to test the hypothesis of different phylogenetic and environmental regulations of root morphological and nutrient traits result in the multidimensions of root traits. 3. Two independent root trait dimensions between root thickness and nutrient traits were detected at both species and community levels. At the species level, diameter-related traits were mainly restricted by phylogenetic structure and showed little plasticity to the changing environments, whereas the variation in woody root nutrient was influenced significantly by soil variables. For community-level traits, the diameter-related axis scores of principal component analysis (PCA) were mainly driven by mean annual temperature (MAT) through shifting species composition, whereas the root nutrient-related axis scores were strongly influenced by soil P availability. 4. From both species and community levels, our study confirms, that the root-thickness-related dimension and root nutrient dimension represent new support for the multidimensionality of root traits which are driven by different selection pressure. This study also underlines that the community-aggregated traits might serve as a promising avenue to improve our understanding of community assemblage processes, allowing us to predict changes of vegetation distributions in a changing climate.

Usage notes

Funding

National Science Foundation, Award: 2016YFC0500202

Location

North-South Transect of Eastern China (NSTEC)