Authors
Joana Bergmann, Alexandra Weigelt, Fons van Der Plas, Daniel C Laughlin, Thom W Kuyper, Nathaly Guerrero-Ramirez, Oscar J Valverde-Barrantes, Helge Bruelheide, Grégoire T Freschet, Colleen M Iversen, Jens Kattge, M Luke McCormack, Ina C Meier, Matthias C Rillig, Catherine Roumet, Marina Semchenko, Christopher J Sweeney, Jasper van Ruijven, Larry M York, Liesje Mommer
Publication date
2020/7/1
Journal
Science Advances
Volume
6
Issue
27
Pages
eaba3756
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Plant economics run on carbon and nutrients instead of money. Leaf strategies aboveground span an economic spectrum from “live fast and die young” to “slow and steady,” but the economy defined by root strategies belowground remains unclear. Here, we take a holistic view of the belowground economy and show that root-mycorrhizal collaboration can short circuit a one-dimensional economic spectrum, providing an entire space of economic possibilities. Root trait data from 1810 species across the globe confirm a classical fast-slow “conservation” gradient but show that most variation is explained by an orthogonal “collaboration” gradient, ranging from “do-it-yourself” resource uptake to “outsourcing” of resource uptake to mycorrhizal fungi. This broadened “root economics space” provides a solid foundation for predictive understanding of belowground responses to changing environmental conditions.
Total citations
202020212022202320241591103156120
Scholar articles
J Bergmann, A Weigelt, F van Der Plas, DC Laughlin… - Science Advances, 2020