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  6. Data from: Carbon allocation to root exudates is maintained in mature temperate tree species under drought

Data from: Carbon allocation to root exudates is maintained in mature temperate tree species under drought

File(s)
BrunnHafner_Rainfall.csv (218 B)
BrunnHafner_Climate.csv (71.99 KB)
BrunnHafner_Soil_Respiration.csv (2.24 KB)
BrunnHafner_Photosynthesis.csv (1.35 KB)
BrunnHafner_Root_Properties_KROOF.csv (2.63 KB)
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Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/6r80-8a15
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/111206
Collections
Horticulture Research Data
Author
Hafner, Benjamin D
Brunn, Melanie
Zwetsloot, Marie J
Weikl, Fabian
Pritsch, Karin
Hikino, Kyohsuke
Ruehr, Nadine K
Sayer, Emma J
Bauerle, Taryn L
Abstract

Data in support of the following research: Carbon (C) exuded via roots is proposed to increase under drought and facilitate important ecosystem functions. However, it is unknown how exudate quantities relate to the total C budget of a drought-stressed tree, i.e. how much of net-C assimilation is allocated to exudation at the tree level. We calculated the proportion of daily C assimilation allocated to root exudation during early summer by collecting root exudates from mature Fagus sylvatica L. and Picea abies (L.) Karst. exposed to experimental drought, and combining above- and belowground C fluxes with leaf, stem, and fine-root surface area. Exudation from individual roots increased exponentially with decreasing soil moisture, with the highest increase at the wilting point. Despite ~50 % reduced C assimilation under drought, exudation from fine-root systems was maintained and trees exuded 1.0 % (F. sylvatica) to 2.5 % (P. abies) of net C into the rhizosphere, increasing the proportion of C allocation to exudates two- to threefold. Water-limited P. abies released two-thirds of its exudate-C into the surface soil, whereas it was only one-third in droughted F. sylvatica. Across the entire root system, droughted trees maintained exudation similar to controls, suggesting drought-imposed belowground C investment, which could be beneficial for ecosystem resilience.

Description
Please cite as: Benjamin D Hafner, Melanie Brunn, Marie J Zwetsloot, Fabian Weikl, Karin Pritsch, Kyohsuke Hikino, Nadine K Ruehr, Emma J Sayer, Taryn L Bauerle. (2022) Data from: Carbon allocation to root exudates is maintained in mature temperate tree species under drought. [dataset] Cornell University eCommons Repository. https://doi.org/10.7298/6r80-8a15
Sponsorship
German Research Foundation (DFG), grant numbers: PR555/2-1, PR292/22-1, GR 1881/5-1, MA1763/7-1, MA1763/10-1
Bavarian State Ministry for Nutrition, Agriculture and Forestry and Bavarian State Ministry for Environment and Consumer Protection, grant number: W047/Kroof II.
Date Issued
2022-04-08
Keywords
Belowground carbon allocation
•
carbon partitioning
•
experimental drought
•
fine-root exudation
•
European beech
•
Norway spruce
•
rhizosphere
•
temperate-forest C budget
Related Publication(s)
Melanie Brunn, Benjamin D Hafner, Marie J Zwetsloot, Fabian Weikl, Karin Pritsch, Kyohsuke Hikino, Nadine K Ruehr, Emma J Sayer, Taryn L Bauerle. (2022) Carbon allocation to root exudates is maintained in mature temperate tree species under drought. New Phytologist, nph.18157. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.18157
Link(s) to Related Publication(s)
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.18157
Rights
CC0 1.0 Universal
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Type
dataset
Accessibility Hazard
none

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