Abstract

AbstractPlant roots play a critical role in regulating the uptake of soil water and nutrients. Shifts in root growth and biomass distribution resulting from climate change can impact ecosystem water and carbon cycling. Such interactions between root growth and ecosystem functioning have not been integrated into current terrestrial ecosystem models. Here a three‐dimensional dynamic root model (DyRoot) was developed and implemented into the Integrated Biosphere Simulator (IBIS) ecosystem model for simulating root growth, architecture (i.e., fine and coarse roots), and distribution driven by soil water and nitrogen availabilities. Field root biomass observations were used for model calibration and validation. Results showed that DyRoot was able to simulate the root biomass distribution across five forest ecosystem types with good performance (R2 = 0.79, P < 0.01). The validations of root distribution in three forest chronosequences suggested that DyRoot captured the changes in rooting depth with the increase in stand age. The sensitivity of simulated root distribution to soil water availability was compared against root biomass observations from two precipitation reduction experiments. Results indicated that DyRoot reasonably represented the decrease of root biomass in topsoil layers in response to the deficits of soil moisture simulated by (IBIS). The DyRoot model algorithm in this study has great implications for representing an optimized root distribution in ecosystem models, which can improve model performance by simulating the feedbacks of root evolution in response to climate change. Furthermore, allowing explicit root architecture in the DyRoot model also sheds light on depicting the responses of root traits to environmental changes.

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