Unique belowground ecological strategies of subtropical and tropical plant species expand the root trait space

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Abstract

Root trait variation may reflect the ecological and evolutionary processes shaping biodiversity, but remains poorly quantified in the (sub)tropics. Here, we aim to further complete our knowledge of belowground functional strategies by assessing the contributions of subtropical and tropical species to global root trait diversity. We gathered root data for 1618 temperate, 341 subtropical, and 775 tropical species. We compared functional diversity among biomes and calculated the unique contribution of each biome to the global root economics space. Further, we determined if the within-variation of subtropical and tropical biomes is shaped by species’ niches and/or differences in evolutionary history. Root trait expressions differed among biomes, but root functional diversity did not. Furthermore, subtropical and tropical biomes accounted for 40% of the unique root functional space within the global traits space. Species’ climate niches and phylogenetic turnover explained variation in root traits (e.g., denser root tissue was associated with drier sites) among subtropical but not tropical species. Through their unique root traits, sub(tropical) species strongly expand the current ‘global’ root trait space. This work underwrites their importance in conceptual models for more complete insights into how various belowground strategies drive plant functional biogeography and biodiversity globally.

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