Root traits in response to frequent fires: Implications for belowground carbon dynamics in fire-prone savannas
- PMID: 36959938
- PMCID: PMC10028150
- DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1106531
Root traits in response to frequent fires: Implications for belowground carbon dynamics in fire-prone savannas
Abstract
Predicting how belowground carbon storage reflects changes in aboveground vegetation biomass is an unresolved challenge in most ecosystems. This is especially true for fire-prone savannas, where frequent fires shape the fraction of carbon allocated to root traits for post-fire vegetation recovery. Here I review evidence on how root traits may respond to frequent fires and propose to leverage root traits to infer belowground carbon dynamics in fire-prone savannas. Evidently, we still lack an understanding of trade-offs in root acquisitive vs. conservative traits in response to frequent fires, nor have we determined which root traits are functionally important to mediate belowground carbon dynamics in a frequently burned environment. Focusing research efforts along these topics should improve our understanding of savanna carbon cycling under future changes in fire regimes.
Keywords: belowground carbon allocation; frequent fire; root functional trait; savannas; soil carbon storage; trait variation.
Copyright © 2023 Zhou.
Conflict of interest statement
The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest
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