Rhizosphere hydrophobicity: A positive trait in the competition for water
Authored by Thorsten Zeppenfeld, Niko Balkenhol, Kristof Kovacs, Andrea Carminati
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0182188
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182188.s003
Abstract
The ability to acquire water from the soil is a major driver in
interspecific plant competition and it depends on several root
functional traits. One of these traits is the excretion of gel-like
compounds (mucilage) that modify physical soil properties. Mucilage
secreted by roots becomes hydrophobic upon drying, impedes the rewetting
of the soil close to the root, the so called rhizosphere, and reduces
water availability to plants. The function of rhizosphere hydrophobicity
is not easily understandable when looking at a single plant, but it may
constitute a competitive advantage at the ecosystem level. We
hypothesize that by making the top soil hydrophobic, deep-rooted plants
avoid competititon with shallow-rooted plants. To test this hypothesis
we used an individual-based model to simulate water uptake and growth of
two virtual plant species, one deep-rooted plant capable of making the
soil hydrophobic and a shallow-rooted plant. We ran scenarios with
different precipitation regimes ranging from dry to wet (350, 700, and
1400 mm total annual precipitation) and from high to low precipitation
frequencies (1, 7, and 14 days). Plant species abundance and biomass
were chosen as indicators for competitiveness of plant species. At
constant precipitation frequency mucilage hydrophobicity lead to a
benefit in biomass and abundance of the tap-rooted population. Under wet
conditions this effect diminished and tap-rooted plants were less
productive. Without this trait both species coexisted. The effect of
root exudation trait remained constant under different precipitation
frequencies. This study shows that mucilage secretion is a competitive
trait for the acquisition of water. This advantage is achieved by the
modification of the soil hydraulic properties and specifically by
inducing water repellency in soil regions which are shared with other
species.
Tags
Dynamics
ecosystems
Protocol
Interface
Release
Pattern-formation
Soil
Hydraulic conductivity
Plant-roots
Repellency