Tree diversity effect on fine root biomass: overyielding via density
dependence rather than spatial root partitioning
Abstract
Complementarity in resource use leading to increased resource
partitioning is the most commonly proposed mechanism for explaining the
positive relationship between plant diversity and productivity. However,
we still have a poor understanding of the relationship between plant
diversity and root biomass. We used molecular method to identify tree
species and to estimate the biomass of fine root (≤ 2 mm in diameter)
for each tree species in soil cores sampled from the plots along a tree
species gradient elaborated in subtropical forests. Our objectives were
to examine whether spatial resource partitioning and symmetric
proliferation are responsible for the relationship between aboveground
tree species richness (SRA) and fine root biomass. We found that
increasing SRA led to higher fine root biomass and a support for
symmetric proliferation strategies, but this pattern only appeared in
nutrient-rich upper soil layer. Structural equation modelling (SEM)
indicated that stand density was the dominant factor to mediate SRA
effects on fine root biomass. Specifically, fine root biomass depended
on the SRA × stand density interaction, with lower biomass at lower
density and low richness, and this effect disappeared in higher density
forests. Overall, we found inconsistent support for the vertical niche
partitioning, indicating that greater soil volume filling is not the
reason for belowground overyielding pattern. Alternatively,
density-dependent biotic interactions affecting tree recruitment are an
important driver affecting productivity in diverse subtropical forests
but the usual root distribution patterns in line with the resource
partitioning hypothesis are unrealistic in contexts where soil nutrients
are heterogeneously distributed.