Species phylogeny, ecology, and root traits as predictors of root exudate composition

Author:

Rathore Nikita1ORCID,Hanzelková Věra12ORCID,Dostálek Tomáš12ORCID,Semerád Jaroslav3ORCID,Schnablová Renáta1ORCID,Cajthaml Tomáš3ORCID,Münzbergová Zuzana12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences Zámek 1 252 43 Průhonice Czech Republic

2. Department of Botany, Faculty of Science Charles University Albertov 6 128 00 Prague Czech Republic

3. Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences Vídeňská 1083 142 20 Prague Czech Republic

Abstract

Summary Root traits including root exudates are key factors affecting plant interactions with soil and thus play an important role in determining ecosystem processes. The drivers of their variation, however, remain poorly understood. We determined the relative importance of phylogeny and species ecology in determining root traits and analyzed the extent to which root exudate composition can be predicted by other root traits. We measured different root morphological and biochemical traits (including exudate profiles) of 65 plant species grown in a controlled system. We tested phylogenetic conservatism in traits and disentangled the individual and overlapping effects of phylogeny and species ecology on traits. We also predicted root exudate composition using other root traits. Phylogenetic signal differed greatly among root traits, with the strongest signal in phenol content in plant tissues. Interspecific variation in root traits was partly explained by species ecology, but phylogeny was more important in most cases. Species exudate composition could be partly predicted by specific root length, root dry matter content, root biomass, and root diameter, but a large part of variation remained unexplained. In conclusion, root exudation cannot be easily predicted based on other root traits and more comparative data on root exudation are needed to understand their diversity.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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