Abstract
Plant roots and their fungal associates have a dominant role in
terrestrial carbon and nutrient cycling. Yet, how different root orders
that vary in their production, quality, and function impact ecosystem
processes remains uncertain. Across five orders of fine roots taken from
forty woody plant species, we found consistently decreasing carbon and
nitrogen release during four years of decomposition in the field the
finer and more short-lived the roots (i.e., with decreasing root order
from 5th to 1st order roots). Differences among root orders were
remarkably well predicted by root carbon chemistry and diameter, with
mycorrhizal type effects only in the coarsest roots (4th and 5th order
roots). Our data shed an entirely new light on how different root orders
and associated mycorrhizae contribute to biogeochemical cycling,
refining the understanding and predictions of drivers and pathways of
soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics.