Global change and root function
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Global Change Biology
- Vol. 4 (7) , 759-772
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2486.1998.00192.x
Abstract
Global change includes land‐use change, elevated CO2 concentrations, increased temperature and increased rainfall variability. All four aspects by themselves and in combination will influence the role of roots in linking below‐ and above‐ground ecosystem function via organic and inorganic resource flows. Root‐mediated ecosystem functions which may be modified by global change include below‐ground resource (water, nutrients) capture, creation and exploitation of spatial heterogeneity, buffering of temporal variations in above‐ground factors, supply and storage of C and nutrients to the below‐ground ecosystem, mobilization of nutrients and C from stored soil reserves, and gas exchange between soil and atmosphere including the emission from soil of greenhouse gases.The theory of a functional equilibrium between root and shoot allocation is used to explore predicted responses to elevated CO2 in relation to water or nutrient supply as limiting root function. The theory predicts no change in root:shoot allocation where water uptake is the limiting root function, but substantial shifts where nutrient uptake is (or becomes) the limiting function. Root turnover will not likely be influenced by elevated CO2, but by changes in regularity of water supply. A number of possible mechanisms for root‐mediated N mineralization is discussed in the light of climate change factors. Rhizovory (root consumption) may increase under global change as the balance between plant chemical defense and adapted root consuming organisms may be modified during biome shifts in response to climate change. Root‐mediated gas exchange allows oxygen to penetrate into soils and methane (CH4) to escape from wetland soils of tundra ecosystems as well as tropical rice production systems. The effect on net greenhouse gas emissions of biome shifts (fens replacing bogs) as well as of agricultural land management will depend partly on aerenchyma in roots.Keywords
This publication has 82 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of elevated CO2 on carbon and nitrogen distribution within a tree (Castanea sativa Mill.) — soil systemPlant and Soil, 1994
- Issues and perspectives for investigating root responses to elevated atmospheric carbon dioxidePlant and Soil, 1994
- Concepts and methods for studying interactions of roots and soil structureGeoderma, 1993
- The carbon costs of root systems of perennial fruit cropsEnvironmental and Experimental Botany, 1993
- Interspecific variation in the growth response of plants to an elevated ambient CO2 concentrationPlant Ecology, 1993
- Cotton root and rhizosphere responses to free‐air CO2enrichmentCritical Reviews in Plant Sciences, 1992
- Nitrogen turnover in the soil-crop system; comparison of fourteen simulation modelsNutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems, 1991
- The Response Of Natural Ecosystems To The Rising Global CO2 LevelsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1990
- Nodulation and nitrogenase activity in nitrogen‐fixing woody plants stimulated by CO2enrichment of the atmospherePhysiologia Plantarum, 1987
- The Mineral Nutrition of Wild PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1980