Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra

Plant community assembly processes shape the composition and abundances of species, and encompass functional traits and resource acquisition strategy of species, biotic interactions and abiotic filtering. Hence, an understanding of these complex processes requires disentangling the effects of multip...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Spitzer, Clydecia
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/1/spitzer_c_210505.pdf
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:23417 2023-05-15T14:25:35+02:00 Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra Spitzer, Clydecia 2021 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/1/spitzer_c_210505.pdf en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/1/spitzer_c_210505.pdf Spitzer, Clydecia (2021). Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra. Diss. (sammanfattning/summary) Sveriges lantbruksuniv., Acta Universitatis Agriculturae Sueciae, 1652-6880 ISBN 978-91-7760-742-7 eISBN 978-91-7760-743-4 [Doctoral thesis] Soil Science Doctoral thesis NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftslunivuppsala 2022-01-09T19:16:16Z Plant community assembly processes shape the composition and abundances of species, and encompass functional traits and resource acquisition strategy of species, biotic interactions and abiotic filtering. Hence, an understanding of these complex processes requires disentangling the effects of multiple factors influencing plant community assembly. In this thesis, I investigated fine root trait associations with soil microorganisms, the resulting feedback effects from those interactions (i.e., plant-soil feedbacks), plant-plant interactions under warming, and the effects of temperature on fine root traits of plant communities in the Swedish sub-arctic tundra. Here, the chemical root economics spectrum (i.e., tradeoff between acquisitive and conservative strategies) predicted the abundance of broad microbial groups, whereas individual fine root traits were associated with the relative abundances of fungal taxa. It also explained plant-soil feedback, with acquisitive trait values resulting in negative feedbacks. In addition, plant-plant interactions were altered under warming, but this was not related to resource-acquisition strategy. Further, community-level root trait responses to temperature were not necessarily related to root resource investment strategy. Taken together, this thesis shows the importance of fine root traits for understanding plant community responses to global change. This has implications for plant community assembly, as well as carbon and nutrient cycling in a future warmer sub-arctic tundra. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Arctic Tundra Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
language English
topic Soil Science
spellingShingle Soil Science
Spitzer, Clydecia
Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
topic_facet Soil Science
description Plant community assembly processes shape the composition and abundances of species, and encompass functional traits and resource acquisition strategy of species, biotic interactions and abiotic filtering. Hence, an understanding of these complex processes requires disentangling the effects of multiple factors influencing plant community assembly. In this thesis, I investigated fine root trait associations with soil microorganisms, the resulting feedback effects from those interactions (i.e., plant-soil feedbacks), plant-plant interactions under warming, and the effects of temperature on fine root traits of plant communities in the Swedish sub-arctic tundra. Here, the chemical root economics spectrum (i.e., tradeoff between acquisitive and conservative strategies) predicted the abundance of broad microbial groups, whereas individual fine root traits were associated with the relative abundances of fungal taxa. It also explained plant-soil feedback, with acquisitive trait values resulting in negative feedbacks. In addition, plant-plant interactions were altered under warming, but this was not related to resource-acquisition strategy. Further, community-level root trait responses to temperature were not necessarily related to root resource investment strategy. Taken together, this thesis shows the importance of fine root traits for understanding plant community responses to global change. This has implications for plant community assembly, as well as carbon and nutrient cycling in a future warmer sub-arctic tundra.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Spitzer, Clydecia
author_facet Spitzer, Clydecia
author_sort Spitzer, Clydecia
title Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
title_short Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
title_full Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
title_fullStr Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
title_full_unstemmed Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
title_sort linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra
publishDate 2021
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/1/spitzer_c_210505.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Tundra
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/23417/1/spitzer_c_210505.pdf
Spitzer, Clydecia (2021). Linking root traits and plant-soil feedbacks to environmental change in the sub-arctic tundra. Diss. (sammanfattning/summary) Sveriges lantbruksuniv., Acta Universitatis Agriculturae Sueciae, 1652-6880 ISBN 978-91-7760-742-7 eISBN 978-91-7760-743-4 [Doctoral thesis]
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