Cusack warned that the root adaptation was not a bulwark against climate change. "Our five-year study is pretty short in terms of the lives of tropical forests," she said. "We don't know how long the forest can sustain these adaptations."
Lead author Amanda Cordeiro, a researcher at the University of Minnesota, who was a PhD candidate at Colorado State University during the study, told Live Science the next steps will be to assess the long-term consequences of the root changes, and how it impacts the overall ecosystem in terms of carbon storage and plant fitness. "For example, it is currently unclear whether increased deeper root production can help tropical forests withstand ongoing chronic drying beyond a few years," she said.