J Integr Plant Biol ›› 2026, Vol. 68 ›› Issue (3): 685-693.DOI: 10.1111/jipb.70092

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  • 收稿日期:2024-12-24 接受日期:2025-10-24 出版日期:2026-03-08 发布日期:2026-03-10

Climate-driven biomass allocation patterns in herbaceous plants of Northern China's drylands

Ya Hu1,2, Zhaobin Song1,2, Xiangyun Li3, Min Chen1,2, Ping Yue1,2, Shaokun Wang1,2, Xujun Ma1,2, Liangxu Liu1,2 and Xiaoan Zuo1,2*   

  1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Ecological Safety and Sustainable Development in Arid Lands, Urat Desert-grassland Research Station, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China

    2. Key Laboratory of Stress Physiology and Ecology in Cold and Arid Region of Gansu Province, Lanzhou 730000, China

    3. Key Laboratory of Tobacco Biology and Processing, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Tobacco Research Institute of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Qingdao 266000, China

    *Correspondence: Xiaoan Zuo (zuoxa@lzb.ac.cn)

  • Received:2024-12-24 Accepted:2025-10-24 Online:2026-03-08 Published:2026-03-10
  • Supported by:
    This research was supported by the Foundation for lnnovative Research Groups in Basic Research of Gansu Province (25JRRA490), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42407633), the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research program (2019QZKK0305), and the 2022 Gansu Postdoctoral Science Foundation (E339880222).

Abstract: Biomass allocation is crucial for predicting ecosystem responses to global change, and yet, whether patterns follow the plastic optimal partitioning theory (OPT) or the constrained allometric partitioning theory (APT) remains contentious across different biomes. A key uncertainty is whether vast, functionally distinct ecosystems, such as temperate and alpine drylands, show different allocation strategies. Here, we investigated root:shoot ratio (R/S) patterns across 120 sites spanning temperate and alpine drylands in northern China. Significant differences in allocation were observed, with temperate drylands showing lower R/S than alpine regions. In temperate drylands, R/S scaled allometrically with plant community size, consistent with APT, with key soil factors exerting only an indirect influence through their effects on plant community size. Conversely, in alpine drylands, R/S was insensitive to plant community size and instead responded directly to the mean annual temperature, a pattern indicative of OPT. We propose that this strategic divergence is linked to their underlying community functional structures. Communities with greater functional dissimilarity may achieve higher niche complementarity, providing the necessary capacity to optimize allocation in response to environmental constraints. Our findings demonstrate that climatic regimes drive alternative biomass allocation strategies, providing both a predictive framework for vegetation responses and a theoretical basis for dryland ecosystem restoration under climate change.

Key words: allometric partitioning theory, biomass allocation, climate change, optimal partitioning theory, root:shoot ratio

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