A general pattern of plant traits and their relationships with environmental factors and microbial life-history strategies

Sci Total Environ. 2024 Jun 25:931:172670. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172670. Epub 2024 Apr 26.

Abstract

The trait-based unidimensional plant economics spectrum provides a valuable framework for understanding plant adaptation strategies to the environment. However, it is still uncertain whether there is a general multidimensionality of how variation of both leaf and fine root traits are influenced by environmental factors, and how these relate to microbial resource strategies. Here, we examined the coordination patterns of four pairs of similar leaf and fine root traits of herbaceous plants in an alpine meadow at the community-level, and their environmental driving patterns. We then assessed their correlation with microbial life-history strategies, as these exhibit analogous resource strategies with plants in terms of growth and resource utilization efficiency. Results exhibited an analogous multidimensionality of the economics spectrum for leaf and fine root traits: the first dimension, collaboration gradient, primarily represented a tradeoff between lifespan and resource foraging efficiency; the second dimension, conservation gradient, primarily represented a tradeoff between conservation and acquisition in resource uptake. Climate variables had a stronger impact on both dimensions for leaf and fine root traits than soil variables did; whereas, the primary drivers were more complex for fine root traits than for leaf traits. The collaboration gradient of leaf and fine root traits exhibited consistent relationships with soil microbial life-history strategies, both showed negative and positive correlation with bacterial and fungal strategies, respectively. Our findings suggest that both leaves and fine roots have general multidimensional strategies for adapting to new environments and provide a solid basis for further understanding the relationships between the adaptive strategies of plants and microbes.

Keywords: Alpine meadow; Environmental patterns; Microbial life-history strategy; Plant economics spectrum; Plant functional traits; Trait multidimensionality.

MeSH terms

  • Grassland
  • Plant Leaves*
  • Plant Physiological Phenomena
  • Plant Roots* / microbiology
  • Plants
  • Soil Microbiology*