Abstract
Since the first vascular plants appeared on land at least 430 million
years ago, plant-soil feedback has started through the root-soil
interface. Plant species have inherently specific and diverse root
traits, but root functional and morphological plasticity is important to
respond to soil changes or diversity in terms of nutrient forms and
availabilities, especially in ecosystems with low plant species
diversity. This paper synthesized how tree plasticity facilitates soil
nutrient acquisition from the tropics to the Arctic. The fine roots of
dipterocarp (Shore laevis) and rhizosphere microbes increase malate
release in acidic soils for phosphorus solubilization, aluminum
detoxification, and lignin degradation. The development of finer roots
is a well-known strategy for the acquisition of limited nutrients, but
the allocation of roots foraging “nutrient hotspots” in deeper soil is
an alternative strategy. Scots pine increases the allocation of finer
roots into the subsoil to solubilize P bonded to Al/Fe oxides in
fine-textured podzol, but not in the coarse-textured podzol with deeper
nutrient hotspots. The black spruce trees increase the biomass
allocation to the belowground to acquire soil nitrogen, especially when
black spruce roots absorb urea in the shallow soil on permafrost. Even
in northern ecosystems with limited species diversity, a combination of
functional plasticity and vertical plasticity of root system
architecture facilitates soil phosphorus or nitrogen limitation.