[Pil-pc-oceania] Laws of Imminent Desertification: (Nature Journal: September 13/2007l)
Deb Guildner
bocor at bigbutton.com.au
Thu Sep 13 14:52:40 EST 2007
What the world needs now is....
more positive feedback! LOL!
Are we the ultimate 'grazer'??
As (an Adelaide wall) graffiti said in 1979: "things will get grazier before
they get better".
(Those under 30 may not get that one...)
Deb
...................................................................
Ecology: Scaling laws in the drier p151
The vegetation of arid ecosystems displays scale-free, self-organized
spatial patterns. Monitoring of such patterns could provide warning signals
of the occurrence of sudden shifts towards desert conditions.
Ricard Solé
doi:10.1038/449151a
Full Text | PDF
See also: Editor's summary :
Editor's Summary
13 September 2007
Reading the signs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arid ecosystems cover about 40% of Earth's land area and are home to over
two billion people, yet they remain vulnerable to climate change and human
actions. Using numerical simulations, and data from Mediterranean ecosystems
in Spain, Morocco and Greece, Kéfi et al. show that patch-size distribution
of vegetation follows a power law. As grazing pressure increases, patch size
deviates from the power law close to the transition to desert conditions. So
patch-size distribution may be a useful early warning of desertification.
The cover shows an arid landscape (top) in the El Planerón nature reserve in
Belchite, Spain, and the lower panels show degradation in this landscape. In
a separate paper, Scanlon et al. use satellite imagery to show that the size
distribution of tree clusters in the Kalahari basin also follows a
scale-free power law. This can be explained by positive feedback associated
with preferential environments near existing trees. In News & Views Ricard
Solé discusses both papers.
COVER IMAGE Sonia & Michaël Kéfi/ Yolanda Pueyo/ Santiago Beguería Portugués
News and Views: Ecology: Scaling laws in the drier
The vegetation of arid ecosystems displays scale-free, self-organized
spatial patterns. Monitoring of such patterns could provide warning signals
of the occurrence of sudden shifts towards desert conditions.
Ricard Solé
doi:10.1038/449151a
Full Text | PDF (458K)
Letter: Positive feedbacks promote power-law clustering of Kalahari
vegetation
Todd M. Scanlon, Kelly K. Caylor, Simon A. Levin & Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe
doi:10.1038/nature06060
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (921K) | Supplementary information
Letter: Spatial vegetation patterns and imminent desertification in
Mediterranean arid ecosystems
Sonia Kéfi, Max Rietkerk, Concepción L. Alados, Yolanda Pueyo, Vasilios P.
Papanastasis, Ahmed ElAich & Peter C. de Ruiter
doi:10.1038/nature06111
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (535K)
Nature 449, 213-217 (13 September 2007) | doi:10.1038/nature06111; Received
27 June 2007; Accepted 24 July 2007
Spatial vegetation patterns and imminent desertification in Mediterranean
arid ecosystems
Sonia Kéfi1, Max Rietkerk1, Concepción L. Alados2, Yolanda Pueyo1, Vasilios
P. Papanastasis3, Ahmed ElAich4 & Peter C. de Ruiter1,5
1.. Department of Environmental Sciences, Copernicus Institute, Utrecht
University, PO Box 80115, 3508 TC Utrecht, The Netherlands
2.. Pyrenean Institute of Ecology, Avda. Montañana 1005. Apdo. 202, 50192
Zaragoza, Spain
3.. Laboratory of Rangeland Ecology, Aristotle University, 54006
Thessaloniki, Greece
4.. Département des Productions Animales, Institut Agronomique et
Vétérinaire Hassan II, Rabat, Morocco
5.. Soil Center, Wageningen University and Research Center,
Droevendaalsesteeg 4, 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands
Correspondence to: Sonia Kéfi1 Correspondence and requests for materials
should be addressed to S.K. (Email: kefi at geo.uu.nl).
Top of page
Humans and climate affect ecosystems and their services1, which may involve
continuous and discontinuous transitions from one stable state to another2.
Discontinuous transitions are abrupt, irreversible and among the most
catastrophic changes of ecosystems identified1. For terrestrial ecosystems,
it has been hypothesized that vegetation patchiness could be used as a
signature of imminent transitions3, 4. Here, we analyse how vegetation
patchiness changes in arid ecosystems with different grazing pressures,
using both field data and a modelling approach. In the modelling approach,
we extrapolated our analysis to even higher grazing pressures to investigate
the vegetation patchiness when desertification is imminent. In three arid
Mediterranean ecosystems in Spain, Greece and Morocco, we found that the
patch-size distribution of the vegetation follows a power law. Using a
stochastic cellular automaton model, we show that local positive
interactions among plants can explain such power-law distributions.
Furthermore, with increasing grazing pressure, the field data revealed
consistent deviations from power laws. Increased grazing pressure leads to
similar deviations in the model. When grazing was further increased in the
model, we found that these deviations always and only occurred close to
transition to desert, independent of the type of transition, and regardless
of the vegetation cover. Therefore, we propose that patch-size distributions
may be a warning signal for the onset of desertification.
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