We tested whether plants allocate proportionately less biomass
to roots in response to above-ground competition
as predicted by optimal partitioning theory. Two population densities of
Abutilon theophrasti were achieved by
planting one individual per pot and varying spacing among pots so that
plants in the two densities experienced the
same soil volume but different degrees of canopy overlap. Density did not
affect root[ratio ]shoot ratio, the partitioning
of biomass between fine roots and storage roots, fine root length, or root
specific length. Plants growing in high
density exhibited typical above-ground responses to neighbours, having
higher ratios of stem to leaf biomass and
greater leaf specific area than those growing in low density. Total root
biomass and shoot biomass were highly
correlated. However, storage root biomass was more strongly correlated
with shoot biomass than was fine-root
biomass. Fine-root length was correlated with above-ground biomass only
for the small subcanopy plants in
crowded populations. Because leaf surface area increased with biomass,
the ratio between absorptive root surface
area and transpirational leaf surface area declined with plant size, a
relationship that could make larger plants more
susceptible to drought. We conclude that A. theophrasti does not
reallocate biomass from roots to shoots in
response to above-ground competition even though much root biomass is apparently
involved in storage and not
in resource acquisition.