The complementarity hypothesis reversed: Root trait similarity in species mixtures promotes soil organic carbon in agroecosystems
2025
Yin, Shuang | Chen, Xinli | Piton, Gabin | Terrer, César | Zhou, Zhenghu | De Deyn, Gerlinde B. | Bertrand, Isabelle | Rasse, Daniel | Chen, Ji | Navarro-Cano, J. A. | Abalos, Diego | European Commission | China Scholarship Council | Aarhus University Research Foundation | Danish Council for Independent Research | Yin, Shuang [0000-0002-9201-4113] | Piton, Gabin [0000-0002-6036-5787] | De Deyn, Gerlinde B. [0000-0003-4823-6912] | Bertrand, Isabelle [0000-0002-2233-631X] | Rasse, Daniel [0000-0002-5977-3863] | Navarro-Cano, J. A. [0000-0001-8091-1063] | Abalos, Diego [0000-0002-4189-5563]
Increasing species diversity in agroecosystems appears as a promising venue to restore or increase soil organic carbon (SOC). It has been hypothesized that this effect is largely driven by the greater variation of root systems in plant mixtures, which may promote complementarity. However, the magnitude of this synergistic effect and the root traits driving it are uncertain. The objective of this study is to determine which root trait composition optimizes plant mixture effects on SOC. To do so, we combined a global meta-analysis of 407 paired SOC content observations under mixed species vs. monocultures across grasslands and croplands, and root traits extracted from the GRooT database. The results show that high root mycorrhizal colonization and root tissue density for the species in the mixture have higher positive effects on SOC content. Our analysis also indicates that combining species with high similarity for these traits represents a preferable trait combination to increase SOC with plant mixtures, challenging the current paradigm around plant trait complementarity effects. We observed that the positive response of SOC content to species mixtures was tightly associated with increased root biomass and soil microbial biomass carbon, indicating an important contribution of belowground and microbial residuals to SOC. Additionally, SOC enhancements by plant species mixtures were more likely to be realized in regions with high precipitation, clay-rich soils, and when legumes are present. Our meta-analysis lays out a root-trait framework to enhance SOC with plant mixtures, which can serve as a guide for species and variety selection for field experiments and on-farm applications.
Show more [+] Less [-]We thank the authors whose work is included in this meta-analysis. This project has received funding from the European Unions' Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 862695 EJP SOIL and was conducted as a part of the project MIXROOT-C. We also acknowledge the China Scholarship Council's support to SY (No. 202206600009) for her study at Aarhus University. DA thanks the Danish Council for Independent Research for funding via a Sapere Aude—DFF Research Leader grant, project “Redefining a plant ideotype to reduce nitrogen pollution” (Grant No. 1051-00060B).
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