Herbs are not just small plants: What biomass allocation to rhizomes tells us about differences between trees and herbs

Author:

Harris Timothy1ORCID,Klimeš Adam12ORCID,Martínková Jana1ORCID,Klimešová Jitka13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental and Functional Morphology Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences Dukelská 135 37901 Třeboň Czech Republic

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences University of Bergen Thormøhlens gate 53 5020 Bergen Norway

3. Department of Botany, Faculty of Science Charles University Benátská 2, 12801 Praha 2 Czech Republic

Abstract

AbstractPremiseBiomass accumulation over years in vertical stems of trees leads to hypoallometric scaling between stem and leaf biomass within this growth form, while for herbaceous species, biomass allocation between these organ types typically exhibits isometry. However, biomass accumulation in herbs can occur in belowground perennating organs (e.g., rhizomes) that are, contrary to aboveground parts of herbs, long‐lived. Although ecologically important, biomass allocation and accumulation in rhizomes (and similar organs) have mostly not been studied.MethodsWe assembled data on biomass investments into plant organs for 111 rhizomatous herbs based on a literature survey and greenhouse experiment. We estimated the proportion of whole‐plant biomass invested into rhizomes and, using allometric relationships, analyzed scaling between rhizome and leaf biomass and whether it is more variable than for other organs.ResultsOn average, rhizomes comprise 30.2% of the total plant biomass. The proportion allocated to rhizomes does not change with plant size. Scaling between rhizome and leaf biomass is isometric, and allocation to rhizomes is not more variable than allocation to other organs.ConclusionsRhizomatous herbs accumulate substantial biomass in rhizomes, and rhizome biomass scales isometrically with leaves, contrary to the hypoallometric relationship between stem and leaves in trees. This difference suggests that the rhizome biomass is in balance with aboveground biomass—a resource of carbon for rhizome formation that, at the same time, is dependent on carbon stored in rhizomes for its seasonal regrowth.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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