• •    

芦苇叶片与细根性状对湿地退化的响应及其影响因素

王琳, 李心雨, 毛志威, 王晟基, 王东晓, 曾小雯, 黄亿克, 张明莉, 窦明, 丁俊祥   

  1. 河南省自然资源监测和国土整治院, 450016
    郑州大学生态与环境学院, 河南 450001 中国
    河南省伏牛山生物资源与生态环境野外科学观测研究站, 450001
    河南理工大学资源环境学院, 454003
    河南省第三地质矿产调查院有限公司, 450000
  • 收稿日期:2026-01-05 修回日期:2026-03-31 接受日期:2026-03-31
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金(32201517); 中国博士后科学基金项目(2023M743206); 河南省自然科学基金(242300421224)

Responses of Phragmites australis leaf and fine-root traits to wetland degradation and their influencing factors

WANG Lin, Li Xinyu, Mao Zhiwei, Wang Sheng-Ji, Wang Dongxiao, Zeng Xiaowen, Huang Yike, Zhang Mingli, Dou Ming, Ding Junxiang   

  1. , Institute of Natural Resources Monitoring and Comprehensive Land Improvement of Henan Province 450016,
    , School of Ecology and Environment, Zhengzhou University 450001, China
    , Henan Funiu Mountain Biological and Ecological Environment Observatory, Zhengzhou University 450001,
    , School of Resources and Environment, Henan Polytechnic University 454003,
    , Henan Third Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources Survey Co., LTD 450000,
  • Received:2026-01-05 Revised:2026-03-31 Accepted:2026-03-31
  • Supported by:
    the National Natural Science Foundation of China(32201517); China Postdoctoral Science Foundation(2023M743206); the Natural Science Foundation of Henan Province(242300421224)

摘要: 阐明植物功能性状对环境变化的响应是理解植物适应策略与生态系统功能的关键。现有研究多聚焦于植物地上部分性状, 而对地下部分性状的研究相对较少, 特别是关于湿地生态系统中叶片与细根性状的协变关系, 目前的认识仍十分有限。本研究以黄河下游典型湿地植物芦苇(Phragmites australis)为对象, 通过测定其关键叶片(比叶面积、干物质含量、氮浓度)与细根(比根长、组织密度、氮浓度)性状, 结合环境因子分析, 探究退化梯度下叶片、细根性状的变异格局与影响因素。结果表明, 随湿地退化加剧, 芦苇的叶片与细根性状呈现从“获取型”向“保守型”策略的协同变化, 表现为比叶面积、叶氮与根氮浓度显著降低, 而叶干物质含量与根组织密度显著增加。比叶面积与比根长呈显著负相关, 且比根长随退化加剧而增加, 表明地上与地下器官在形态策略上存在一定的功能分异。进一步分析发现, 土壤养分有效性的下降是驱动退化过程中性状变异的关键环境因子。随着养分有效性降低, 芦苇叶片与细根均向高组织密度、低氮浓度的“保守型”性状方向变化。本研究从功能性状视角揭示了芦苇通过叶−根性状的协同调整以适应退化湿地的养分限制, 该发现丰富了变化环境下湿地植物地上与地下协调适应策略的理解, 并为退化湿地生态系统的功能恢复提供了理论依据。

关键词: 湿地生态系统, 生境退化, 植物功能性状, 生态策略, 土壤养分

Abstract: Clarifying the responses of plant functional traits to environmental changes is crucial for understanding plant adaptation strategies and ecosystem functions. While most studies have focused on aboveground plant traits, with limited research on belowground traits, especially the covariation of leaf and fine root traits in wetlands.This study took the typical wetland plant Phragmites australis in the lower reaches of the Yellow River as the object, measured its key leaf (i.e., specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content and nitrogen concentration) and fine root (i.e., specific root length, root tissue density and nitrogen concentration) traits, and combined with environmental factor analysis to explore the variation patterns and influencing factors of plant traits under the gradient of wetland degradation.With the intensification of wetland degradation, leaf and fine root traits of P. australis presented a coordinated change from acquisition to conservation strategy, manifested as a significant decrease in specific leaf area, leaf nitrogen concentration and root nitrogen concentration, while leaf dry matter content and root tissue density significantly increased. However, specific leaf area and specific root length showed a significant negative correlation, with the latter increasing along the degradation gradient, indicating a certain functional divergence in morphological strategies between aboveground and belowground organs. Further analysis revealed that soil nutrient availability was the key environmental factor driving trait variation during degradation. As nutrient availability decreased, both the leaves and fine roots of P. australis shifted toward a “conservative” strategy characterized by high tissue density and low nitrogen concentration. By integrating leaf and root traits, this study reveals that P. australis adapts to nutrient limitation in degraded wetlands through the coordinated aboveground-belowground adjustments. These findings deepen our understanding of plant adaptive strategies under environmental change and offer a theoretical foundation for the functional restoration of degraded wetland ecosystems.

Key words: wetland ecosystem, habitat degradation, plant functional traits, ecological strategy, soil nutrient