Published March 11, 2019 | Version v1

Data from: Relationships between plant traits, soil properties and carbon fluxes differ between monocultures and mixed communities in temperate grassland

  • 1. University of Manchester
  • 2. University of Edinburgh
  • 3. Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
  • 4. Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
  • 5. Lancaster University

Description

1. The use of plant traits to predict ecosystem functions has been gaining growing attention. Aboveground plant traits, such as leaf nitrogen (N) content and specific leaf area (SLA), have been shown to strongly relate to ecosystem productivity, respiration, and nutrient cycling. Further, increasing plant functional trait diversity has been suggested as a possible mechanism to increase ecosystem carbon (C) storage. However, it is uncertain whether belowground plant traits can be predicted by aboveground traits, and if both above- and belowground traits can be used to predict soil properties and ecosystem-level functions. 2. Here, we used two adjacent field experiments in temperate grassland to investigate if above- and belowground plant traits are related, and whether relationships between plant traits, soil properties and ecosystem C fluxes (i.e., ecosystem respiration and net ecosystem exchange) measured in potted monocultures could be detected in mixed field communities. 3. We found that certain shoot traits (e.g., shoot N and C, and leaf dry matter content) were related to root traits (e.g., root N, root C:N, and root dry matter content) in monocultures, but such relationships were either weak or not detected in mixed communities. Some relationships between plant traits (i.e., shoot N, root N and/or shoot C:N) and soil properties (i.e., inorganic N availability and microbial community structure) were similar in monocultures and mixed communities, but they were more strongly linked to shoot traits in monocultures and root traits in mixed communities. Structural equation modelling showed that above- and belowground traits and soil properties improved predictions of ecosystem C fluxes in monocultures, but not in mixed communities on the basis of community-weighted mean traits. 4. Synthesis: Our results from a single grassland habitat detected relationships in monocultures between above- and belowground plant traits, and between plant traits, soil properties and ecosystem C fluxes. However, these relationships were generally weaker or different in mixed communities. Our results demonstrate that while plant traits can be used to predict certain soil properties and ecosystem functions in monocultures, they are less effective for predicting how changes in plant species composition influence ecosystem functions in mixed communities.

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Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/1365-2745.13160 (DOI)