Options
Root taxa identification in plant mixtures - current techniques and future challenges
ISSN
1573-5036
0032-079X
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
Rewald, Boris
Meinen, Catharina
Trockenbrodt, Michael
Ephrath, Jhonathan E.
Rachmilevitch, Shimon
DOI
10.1007/s11104-012-1164-0
Abstract
Studying root biomass, root system distribution and belowground interactions is essential for understanding the composition of plant communities, the impact of global change, and terrestrial biogeochemistry. Most soil samples and minirhizotron pictures hold roots of more than one species or plant individual. The identification of taxa by their roots would allow species-specific questions to be posed; information about root affiliation to plant individuals could be used to determine intra-specific competition. Researchers need to be able to discern plant taxa by roots as well as to quantify abundances in mixed root samples. However, roots show less distinctive features that permit identification than aboveground organs. This review discusses the primary use of available methods, outlining applications, shortcomings and future developments. Methods are either non-destructive, e.g. visual examination of root morphological criteria in situ, or require excavated and excised root samples. Among the destructive methods are anatomical keys, chemotaxonomic approaches and molecular markers. While some methods allow for discerning the root systems of individual plants, others can distinguish roots on the functional group or plant taxa level; methods such as IR spectroscopy and qPCR allow for quantifying the root biomass proportion of species without manual sorting.
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
11104_2012_Article_1164.pdf
Size
628.34 KB
Checksum (MD5)
a87e0f194477d12ad164740a4c87c57b