Root hydraulic properties: An exploration of their variability across scales

Author:

Baca Cabrera Juan C.1ORCID,Vanderborght Jan1ORCID,Couvreur Valentin2ORCID,Behrend Dominik3,Gaiser Thomas3,Nguyen Thuy Huu3,Lobet Guillaume1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Bio‐ and Geoscience, Agrosphere (IBG‐3) Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH Jülich Germany

2. Earth and Life Institute Université catholique de Louvain Louvain‐la‐Neuve Belgium

3. Institute of Crop Science and Resources Conservation University of Bonn Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractRoot hydraulic properties are key physiological traits that determine the capacity of root systems to take up water, at a specific evaporative demand. They can strongly vary among species, cultivars or even within the same genotype, but a systematic analysis of their variation across plant functional types (PFTs) is still missing. Here, we reviewed published empirical studies on root hydraulic properties at the segment‐, individual root‐, or root system scale and determined its variability and the main factors contributing to it. This corresponded to a total of 241 published studies, comprising 213 species, including woody and herbaceous vegetation.We observed an extremely large range of variation (of orders of magnitude) in root hydraulic properties, but this was not caused by systematic differences among PFTs. Rather, the (combined) effect of factors such as root system age, driving force used for measurement, or stress treatments shaped the results. We found a significant decrease in root hydraulic properties under stress conditions (drought and aquaporin inhibition, p < .001) and a significant effect of the driving force used for measurement (hydrostatic or osmotic gradients, p < .001). Furthermore, whole root system conductance increased significantly with root system age across several crop species (p < .01), causing very large variation in the data (>2 orders of magnitude). Interestingly, this relationship showed an asymptotic shape, with a steep increase during the first days of growth and a flattening out at later stages of development. We confirmed this dynamic through simulations using a state‐of‐the‐art computational model of water flow in the root system for a variety of crop species, suggesting common patterns across studies and species.These findings provide better understanding of the main causes of root hydraulic properties variations observed across empirical studies. They also open the door to better representation of hydraulic processes across multiple plant functional types and at large scales. All data collected in our analysis has been aggregated into an open access database (https://roothydraulic-properties.shinyapps.io/database/), fostering scientific exchange.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Commission

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

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