Root turnover is a critical component of ecosystem nutrient dynamics and carbon sequestration and is also an
important sink for plant primary productivity. We tested global controls on root turnover across climatic gradients
and for plant functional groups by using a database of 190 published studies. Root turnover rates increased
exponentially with mean annual temperature for fine roots of grasslands (r2 = 0.48) and forests (r2 = 0.17) and
for total root biomass in shrublands (r2 = 0.55). On the basis of the best-fit exponential model, the Q10 for root
turnover was 1.4 for forest small diameter roots (5 mm or less), 1.6 for grassland fine roots, and 1.9 for shrublands.
Surprisingly, after accounting for temperature, there was no such global relationship between precipitation and
root turnover. The slowest average turnover rates were observed for entire tree root systems (10% annually),
followed by 34% for shrubland total roots, 53% for grassland fine roots, 55% for wetland fine roots, and 56% for
forest fine roots. Root turnover decreased from tropical to high-latitude systems for all plant functional groups.
To test whether global relationships can be used to predict interannual variability in root turnover, we evaluated
14 yr of published root turnover data from a shortgrass steppe site in northeastern Colorado, USA. At this site
there was no correlation between interannual variability in mean annual temperature and root turnover. Rather,
turnover was positively correlated with the ratio of growing season precipitation and maximum monthly
temperature (r2 = 0.61). We conclude that there are global patterns in rates of root turnover between plant groups
and across climatic gradients but that these patterns cannot always be used for the successful prediction of the
relationship of root turnover to climate change at a particular site.