Extended patchy ecosystems may increase their total biomass through self-replication
Mustapha Tlidi, Ignacio Bordeu, Marcel G. Clerc, Daniel Escaff

TL;DR
This paper models how vegetation patches can self-replicate and form patterns under different environmental stresses, with implications for understanding ecosystem stability and transitions.
Contribution
It extends existing models by incorporating non-local plant interactions, providing a more realistic framework for vegetation pattern formation and self-replication.
Findings
Moderate aridity leads to transition from single patches to periodic patterns.
High hydric stress causes decay of vegetation cover into spot-like patterns.
Field data from Zambia and Mozambique support the self-organization hypothesis.
Abstract
Patches of vegetation consist of dense clusters of shrubs, grass, or trees, often found to be circular characteristic size, defined by the properties of the vegetation and terrain. Therefore, vegetation patches can be interpreted as localized structures. Previous findings have shown that such localized structures can self-replicate in a binary fashion, where a single vegetation patch elongates and divides into two new patches. Here, we extend these previous results by considering the more general case, where the plants interact non-locally, this extension adds an extra level of complexity and shrinks the gap between the model and real ecosystems, where it is known that the plant-to-plant competition through roots and above-ground facilitating interactions have non-local effects, i.e. they extend further away than the nearest neighbor distance. Through numerical simulations, we show that…
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