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Fine‐root dynamics vary with soil depth and precipitation in a low‐nutrient tropical forest in the Central Amazonia...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Plant-Environment Interactions
Publication Date
Volume
TBD
Issue
TBD

● A common assumption in tropical ecology is that root systems respond rapidly to climatic cues but that most of that response is limited to the uppermost layer of the soil, with relatively limited changes in deeper layers. However, this assumption has not been tested directly, preventing models from accurately predicting the response of tropical forests to environmental change.
● We measured seasonal dynamics of fine roots in a Central Amazonia mature forest using minirhizotrons to 90 cm depth, which were calibrated with fine roots extracted from soil cores.
● Root productivity and mortality in superficial soil layers were positively correlated with precipitation, whereas root standing length was greater during the dry periods at the deeper layers. Contrary to historical assumptions, a large fraction of fine-root standing biomass (46%) and productivity (41%) were found in soil layers deeper than 30 cm. Furthermore, root turnover decreased linearly with soil depth.
● Our findings demonstrate a strong relationship between fine-root dynamics and precipitation regimes in Central Amazonia. Our results also emphasize the importance of deep roots for accurate estimates of primary productivity and the interaction between roots and carbon, water, and nutrients.