Nadpis | Surplus Carbon Drives Allocation and Plant–Soil Interactions |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2020 |
Autoři | Prescott, CE, Greyston, SJ, Helmisaari, H-S, Kaštovská, E, Korner, C, Lambers, H, Meier, IC, Millard, P, Ostonen, I |
Journal | Trends in Ecology and Evolution |
Klíčová slova | carbon allocation, mycorrhizal fungi, nonstructural carbohydrates, nutrient limitation, root exudates, secondary metabolites |
Abstract | Plant growth is usually constrained by the availability of nutrients, water, or temperature, rather than photosynthetic carbon (C) fixation. Under these conditions leaf growth is curtailed more than C fixation, and the surplus photosynthates are exported from the leaf. In plants limited by nitrogen (N) or phosphorus (P), photosynthates are converted into sugars and secondary metabolites. Some surplus C is translocated to roots and released as root exudates or transferred to root-associated microorganisms. Surplus C is also produced under low moisture availability, low temperature, and high atmospheric CO2 concentrations, with similar below-ground effects. Many interactions among above- and below-ground ecosystem components can be parsimoniously explained by the production, distribution, and release of surplus C under conditions that limit plant growth. |
DOI | 10.1016/j.tree.2020.08.007 |