Rooting depth is an ecosystem trait that determines the extent of soil
development and carbon (C) and water cycling. Recent hypotheses propose
that human-induced changes to Earth’s biogeochemical cycles propagate
deeply due to rooting depth changes from agricultural and
climate-induced land cover changes. Yet, the lack of a global-scale
quantification of rooting depth responses to human activity limits
knowledge of hydrosphere-atmosphere-lithosphere feedbacks in the
Anthropocene. Here we use land cover datasets to demonstrate that root
depth distributions are changing globally as a consequence of
agricultural expansion truncating depths above which 99% of root
biomass occurs (D99) by ~60 cm, and woody encroachment
linked to anthropogenic climate change extending D99 in other regions by
~38 cm. The net result of these two opposing drivers is
a global reduction of D99 by 5%, or ~8 cm, representing
a loss of ~11,600 km3 of rooted
volume. Projected land cover scenarios in 2100 suggest additional future
D99 shallowing of up to 30 cm, generating further losses of rooted
volume of ~43,500 km3, values
exceeding root losses experienced to date and suggesting that the pace
of root shallowing will quicken in the coming century. Losses of Earth’s
deepest roots — soil-forming agents — suggest unanticipated changes
in fluxes of water, solutes, and C. Two important messages emerge from
our analyses: dynamic, human-modified root distributions should be
incorporated into earth systems models, and a significant gap in deep
root research inhibits accurate projections of future root distributions
and their biogeochemical consequences.