Premium
Root responses along a subambient to elevated CO 2 gradient in a C 3 –C 4 grassland
Author(s) -
ANDERSON LAUREL J.,
DERNER JUSTIN D.,
POLLEY H. WAYNE,
GORDON WENDY S.,
EISSENSTAT DAVID M.,
JACKSON ROBERT B.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2009.01975.x
Subject(s) - perennial plant , biomass (ecology) , grassland , respiration , botany , chemistry , horticulture , biology , zoology , agronomy
Atmospheric CO 2 ( C a ) concentration has increased significantly during the last 20 000 years, and is projected to double this century. Despite the importance of belowground processes in the global carbon cycle, community‐level and single species root responses to rising C a are not well understood. We measured net community root biomass over 3 years using ingrowth cores in a natural C 3 –C 4 grassland exposed to a gradient of C a from preglacial to future levels (230–550 μmol mol −1 ). Root windows and minirhizotron tubes were installed below naturally occurring stands of the C 4 perennial grass Bothriochloa ischaemum and its roots were measured for respiration, carbohydrate concentration, specific root length (SRL), production, and lifespan over 2 years. Community root biomass increased significantly ( P <0.05) with C a over initial conditions, with linear or curvilinear responses depending on sample date. In contrast, B. ischaemum produced significantly more roots at subambient than elevated C a in minirhizotrons. The lifespan of roots with five or more neighboring roots in minirhizotron windows decreased significantly at high C a , suggesting that after dense root growth depletes soil resource patches, plants with carbon surpluses readily shed these roots. Root respiration in B. ischaemum showed a curvilinear response to C a under moist conditions in June 2000, with the lowest rates at C a <300 μmol mol −1 and peak activity at 450 μmol mol −1 in a quadratic model. B. ischaemum roots at subambient C a had higher SRLs and slightly higher carbohydrate concentrations than those at higher C a , which may be related to drier soils at low C a . Our data emphasize that belowground responses of plant communities to C a can be quite different from those of the individual species, and suggest that complex interactions between and among roots and their immediate soil environment influence the responses of root physiology and lifespan to changing C a .