Project

Beyond leaf economics: Integrating root, leaf and stem traits to examine resource acquisition and tree growth

Improving tree growth is important to meet timber and biomass demands, and driven by leaf, stem and root properties that determine the acquisition and loss of resources.

The impact of leaf traits on growth is well-established, but root traits are still understudied, although they determine the uptake of essential resources, and are linked with stem and leaf traits. Because of these links, integrating root, leaf and stem traits seems the key to understand tree growth.

Improving tree growth and forest productivity is important to meet timber and biomass demands, and mitigate climate change. This study assesses how growth is driven by leaf, stem and root properties that determine the acquisition and loss of resources, and by environmental variables. The impact of leaf traits on growth has been widely studied, and a worldwide leaf economics spectrum suggests that leaf traits are correlated in syndromes tightly associated with growth. To date, root traits and their dynamics have received far less attention in functional trait studies, although they take up resources essential to growth, and are linked with stem and leaf traits. Due to these functional links between roots, stem and leaves, integrating their traits and dynamics could well be the key to assess and understand tree growth, rather than from leaf properties alone.

During this PhD project, I aim to examine and understand tree growth from the integrated impacts of root, stem and leaf traits on growth along a soil resource gradient, with specific focus on the understudied root traits and their plasticity. The influence of the (soil) environment on traits, and consequently tree growth, is accounted for in this project, especially because the plasticity in root dynamics has never been studied on dominant trees.

In line with this objective, we selected two study sites in the Netherlands on a wet, nutrient-rich and a dry, nutrient-poor soil. On both sites, we will measure and analyze traits and dynamics of dominant trees of a variety of species, and correlate these data across plant parts to test if and how leaf, stem and root traits are linked across species and across sites. Next, we will integrate these trait data in a whole-plant growth model, to assess and predict growth from traits, underlying physiological principles and variation in soil conditions. Ultimately, this will reveal whether and how traits are functionally coupled and how these relationships determine growth in general, and specifically for a variety of common NW European tree species and field conditions.

MSc thesis topics

Publications