ABSTRACT
Global data sets of rooting depths, long-term means of monthly
precipitation and potential evapotranspiration, and soil texture were
used to predict the probability of deep rooting around the globe.
Rooting depths were considered to be deep if 5% or more of all roots in
a profile were located below 2 m depth. Spatially explicit global
predictions were based on empirical models relating the probability of
deep rooting with climate and soil texture. Based on these
predictions, deep roots are most likely to occur in seasonally dry,
semi-arid to humid tropical regions under savanna or thorn-scrub
vegetation or under seasonally dry semi-deciduous to evergreen
forests. Deep roots are least likely to occur in arctic, boreal
or cool-temperate regions and in per-humid climates such as equatorial
rain forests. Under warm-temperate to tropical climates, rooting
depths are more likely to be deep in coarse-textured and fine-textured
soil than in soils of medium texture. These observations agree
well with predictions based on a previously published conceptual model,
according to which water infiltration depths and evaporative demand are
the main climatic factors to determine vertical root distributions on a
global scale.
Keywords: roots; rooting depths; global maps; global root
distributions; natural vegetation; evapotranspiration; soil texture;
soil water balance.
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