The plant root economics space in relation to nutrient limitation in Eurasian herbaceous plant communities

Author:

Scheifes Daniil J. P.1ORCID,te Beest Mariska12ORCID,Olde Venterink Harry3ORCID,Jansen André4,Kinsbergen Daan T. P.5,Wassen Martin J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

2. Centre for African Conservation Ecology Nelson Mandela University Gqeberha South Africa

3. Department of Biology, WILD Vrije Universiteit Brussel Brussels Belgium

4. Jansen‐de Hullu Landschapsecologie en Circulair Zutphen The Netherlands

5. Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractPlant species occupy distinct niches along a nitrogen‐to‐phosphorus (N:P) gradient, yet there is no general framework for belowground nutrient acquisition traits in relation to N or P limitation. We retrieved several belowground traits from databases, placed them in the “root economics space” framework, and linked these to a dataset of 991 plots in Eurasian herbaceous plant communities, containing plant species composition, aboveground community biomass and tissue N and P concentrations. Our results support that under increasing N:P ratio, belowground nutrient acquisition strategies shift from “fast” to “slow” and from “do‐it‐yourself” to “outsourcing”, with alternative “do‐it‐yourself” to “outsourcing” strategies at both ends of the spectrum. Species' mycorrhizal capacity patterns conflicted with root economics space predictions based on root diameter, suggesting evolutionary development of alternative strategies under P limitation. Further insight into belowground strategies along nutrient stoichiometry is crucial for understanding the high abundance of threatened plant species under P limitation.

Publisher

Wiley

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