Global-scale shifts in Anthropocene rooting depths pose unexamined
consequences in critical zone functioning
Abstract
Rooting depth is an ecosystem trait that determines the extent of soil
development and carbon cycling. Recent hypotheses propose that
human-induced changes to Earth’s biogeochemical cycles propagate deeply
due to rooting depth changes from agricultural and
climate-induced land cover changes. Yet, the lack of
a global-scale quantification of rooting depth responses to human
activity limits knowledge of hydrosphere-atmosphere-lithosphere
feedbacks in the Anthropocene. Here we use land cover datasets to
demonstrate that global rooting depths have become shallower in the
Anthropocene, and are likely to become yet shallower this century.
Specifically, globally averaged depths above which 99% of root biomass
occurs (D99) are 8.7%, or 16 cm, shallower relative to those for
potential vegetation. This net shallowing results from agricultural
expansion truncating D99 by 82 cm, and woody encroachment linked to
anthropogenic climate change extending D99 by 65 cm. Projected land
cover scenarios in 2100 suggest further D99 shallowing of 63 to 72 cm,
exceeding that experienced to date and suggesting that the pace of root
shallowing will quicken in the coming century. Losses of Earth’s deepest
roots—soil-forming agents—suggest unanticipated changes in fluxes of
water, solutes, and carbon. Our work constrains rooting depth
distributions for global models, allowing the land modeling community to
explore cascading effects of rooting depth changes on water, carbon, and
energy dynamics, and can guide design of field-based efforts to quantify
deep anthropogenic influences. Understanding human influence on biota’s
reach into Earth’s subsurface will improve predictions of interactive
functioning of the biosphere, lithosphere, and hydrosphere.