Responses of tree fine roots to temperature
Soil temperature can influence the functioning of roots in many ways. If soil moisture and nutrient availability are adequate, rates of root length extension and root mortality increase with increasing soil temperature, at least up to an optimal temperature for root growth, which seems to vary among...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The New phytologist 2000-07, Vol.147 (1), p.105-115 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Soil temperature can influence the functioning of roots in many ways. If soil moisture and nutrient availability are
adequate, rates of root length extension and root mortality increase with increasing soil temperature, at least up
to an optimal temperature for root growth, which seems to vary among taxa. Root growth and root mortality are
highly seasonal in perennial plants, with a flush of growth in spring and significant mortality in the fall. At present
we do not understand whether root growth phenology responds to the same temperature cues that are known to
control shoot growth. We also do not understand whether the flush of root growth in the spring depends on the
utilization of stored nonstructural carbohydrates, or if it is fueled by current photosynthate. Root respiration
increases exponentially with temperature, but Q10 values range widely from c. 1.5 to > 3.0. Significant questions
yet to be resolved are: whether rates of root respiration acclimate to soil temperature, and what mechanisms
control acclimation if it occurs. Limited data suggest that fine roots depend heavily on the import of new carbon
(C) from the canopy during the growing season. We hypothesize that root growth and root respiration are tightly
linked to whole-canopy assimilation through complex source–sink relationships within the plant. Our
understanding of how the whole plant responds to dynamic changes in soil temperature, moisture and nutrient
availability is poor, even though it is well known that multiple growth-limiting resources change simultaneously
through time during a typical growing season. We review the interactions between soil temperature and other
growth-limiting factors to illustrate how simple generalizations about temperature and root functioning can be
misleading. |
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ISSN: | 0028-646X 1469-8137 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1469-8137.2000.00689.x |