4.7 Article

Effects of Tree Species Diversity on Fine Root Morphological Characteristics, Productivity and Turnover Rates

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13101740

Keywords

fine root morphological characteristics; fine root productivity; fine root turnover rate; species diversity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31901210]
  2. Liaocheng University Innovation and Entrepreneurship training program [CXCY2022016, CXCY2022092, CXCY2022372]
  3. Doctoral Research Project of Liaocheng University [318052123]

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This study investigates the effect of tree species diversity on the functional characteristics of fine roots. The results show that increasing tree species diversity does not change the morphological characteristics of fine roots, but it increases their productivity and turnover rate.
Fine roots (phi <= 2 mm) play an important role in the process of material and nutrient cycling in forest ecosystems, but the effect of tree species diversity on the functional characteristics of fine roots is unclear. In this study, 1-7 subtropical communities with different species richness were selected to study the morphological characteristics, productivity (PRO), and turnover rate (TUR) of fine roots by continuous soil core extraction, ingrowth soil core method, and root analysis system. The effects of tree species diversity on fine root morphological characteristics, PRO, and TUR are also analyzed. The results showed that with the increase in tree species diversity in the community, the effect of fine root morphological characteristics including specific root length (SRL) and specific surface area (SSA) of each community was not significant, but the fine root PRO in the community increased from 71.63 g center dot m(-2)center dot a(-1) (Ligustrum lucidum pure forest) to 232.95 g center dot m(-2)center dot a(-1) (Cinnamomum camphora mixed forest with seven species richness communities), and the fine root TUR increased from 0.539 times center dot a(-1) to 0.747 times center dot a(-1). Correlation analysis and redundancy analysis showed that species richness, root functional traits, and soil physicochemical properties were important driving factors affecting root characteristics. The increase in tree species diversity did not change the morphological characteristics of fine roots but increased the PRO and TUR of fine roots.

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