RESUMO
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Cluster roots are a characteristic root adaptation of Proteaceae species. In South African and Australian species, cluster roots promote phosphorus (P) acquisition from poor soils. In a South American Proteaceae species, where cluster roots have been scarcely studied and their function is unknown, we tested whether cluster-root formation is stimulated by low soil nutrition, in particular low P-availability. METHODS: Small and large seedlings (< 6- and > 6-months old, respectively) of Embothrium coccineum and soil were collected across four different sites in Patagonia (Chile). We determined cluster-root number and relative mass, and leaf Pi concentration per mass (Pimass) and per area (Piarea) for each seedling, and tested relationships with Olsen-P (OP), sorbed-P (sP) and total nitrogen (N) using generalized linear mixed-effects models and model selection to assess the relative strength of soil and plant drivers. KEY RESULTS: Best-fit models showed a negative logarithmic relationship between cluster-root number and soil nitrogen (N), and between cluster-root relative mass and both leaf Piarea and soil N, and a positive logarithmic relationship between cluster-root number and leaf Piarea. Cluster-root relative mass was higher in small than in large seedlings. CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to that found in South African and Australian Proteaceae, cluster roots of E. coccineum do not appear to be driven by soil P, but rather by soil N and leaf Piarea. We suggest that cluster roots are a constitutive and functional trait that allows plants to prevail in poor N soils.