Rooting for function: community-level fine-root traits relate to many ecosystem functions

Publication date

2025-12

Authors

Barry, Kathryn E.ORCID 0000-0001-6893-6479ISNI 0000000506321398
Hennecke, Justus
Weigelt, Alexandra
Bergmann, Joana
Bruelheide, Helge
Freschet, Gregoire T.
Iversen, Colleen M.
Kuyper, Thomas W.
Laughlin, Daniel C.
Mccormack, M. Luke

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Humans are driving biodiversity change, which also alters community functional traits. However, how changes in the functional traits of the community alter ecosystem functions-especially belowground-remains an important gap in our understanding of the consequences of biodiversity change. We test hypotheses for how the root traits of the root economics space (composed of the collaboration and conservation gradients) are associated with proxies for ecosystem functioning across grassland and forest ecosystems in both observational and experimental datasets from 810 plant communities. First, we assessed whether community-weighted means of the root economics space traits adhered to the same trade-offs as species-level root traits. Then, we examined the relationships between community-weighted mean root traits and aboveground biomass production, root standing biomass, soil fauna biomass, soil microbial biomass, decomposition of standard and plot-specific material, ammonification, nitrification, phosphatase activity, and drought resistance. We found evidence for a community collaboration gradient but not for a community conservation gradient. Yet, links between community root traits and ecosystem functions were more common than we expected, especially for aboveground biomass, microbial biomass, and decomposition. These findings suggest that changes in species composition, which alter root trait means, will in turn affect critical ecosystem functions.

Keywords

biodiversity, ecosystem functions, fine roots, functional diversity, root economics space, root traits, trait-functioning relationships, Physiology, Plant Science, SDG 15 - Life on Land

Citation

Barry, K E, Hennecke, J, Weigelt, A, Bergmann, J, Bruelheide, H, Freschet, G T, Iversen, C M, Kuyper, T W, Laughlin, D C, Mccormack, M L, Roumet, C, van der Plas, F, van Ruijven, J, Wijsmuller, R, Auge, H, Eisenhauer, N, Haase, J, Nock, C A, Oelmann, Y, Wilcke, W & Mommer, L 2025, 'Rooting for function : community-level fine-root traits relate to many ecosystem functions', New Phytologist, vol. 248, no. 6, pp. 3221-3239. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.70606