Abstract

1. We examined the branching patterns of plant root systems to test the expectation that these differ both in a species-specific fashion in species from habitats differing in soil resource availability and as a plastic response to varying resource levels. 2. We grew 17 species of winter annual plants in a common greenhouse environment at two soil resource levels. Water and all nutrients were varied in tandem. The species were from collections made at two stabilized sand dune sites in Israel; one a resource-poor desert site, the other a relatively rich mediterranean site. 3. Branching pattern was quantified by Fitter's altitude topological index. High values of this index indicate a herringbone branching pattern, with root systems consisting of a main axis and primary laterals only. Low values indicate a more dichotomous branching pattern. 4. Dicots showed the predicted plastic response, tending towards more herringbone root systems with decreased resource availability. Dicots from the lower-resource desert site had more herringbone root systems than those from the richer mediterranean site, although this difference was significant only when the species were grown under low-resource conditions. 5. Grasses were relatively invariant, with close to maximally herringbone topology and did not show any significant plastic response or differences between species of different habitats.

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