The effects of psammophilous plants on sand dune dynamics
Golan Bel, Yosef Ashkenazy

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical model incorporating psammophilous plants to better understand their role in stabilizing sand dunes and influencing dune states under varying climatic conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel set of differential equations modeling psammophilous plants' effects on dune dynamics, filling a gap in existing sand dune models.
Findings
Psammophilous plants can create multiple steady dune states.
Dune activity correlates with vegetation and soil crust cover.
Model aligns with observed dune stabilization processes.
Abstract
Psammophilous plants are special plants that flourish in sand moving environments. There are two main mechanisms by which the wind affects these plants: (i) sand drift exposes roots and covers branches--the exposed roots turn into new plants and the covered branches turn into new roots; both mechanisms result in an enhanced growth rate of the psammophilous plant cover of the dunes; (ii) strong winds, often associated with sand movement, tear branches and seed them in nearby locations, resulting in new plants and an enhanced growth rate of the psammophilous plant cover of the dunes. Despite their important role in dune dynamics, to our knowledge, psammophilous plants have never been incorporated into mathematical models of sand dunes. Here, we attempt to model the effects of these plants on sand dune dynamics. We construct a set of three ordinary differential equations for the fractions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAeolian processes and effects · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research · Biocrusts and Microbial Ecology
