Integrating theory and experiments to link local mechanisms and ecosystem-level consequences of vegetation patterns in drylands
Ricardo Martinez-Garcia, Ciro Cabal, Justin M. Calabrese, Emilio, Hern\'andez-Garc\'ia, Corina E. Tarnita, Crist\'obal L\'opez, Juan A., Bonachela

TL;DR
This paper reviews theories and proposes empirical tests to understand the mechanisms behind vegetation pattern formation in drylands, aiming to improve predictions of ecosystem health and desertification dynamics.
Contribution
It integrates theoretical review and experimental proposals to distinguish between competing mechanisms of vegetation pattern formation in drylands.
Findings
Different theories predict contrasting desertification outcomes.
Empirical tests can identify the actual mechanisms behind pattern formation.
Understanding these mechanisms improves ecosystem fate predictions.
Abstract
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in drylands and, because pattern shape correlates with water availability, they have been suggested as important indicators of ecosystem health. However, the mechanisms underlying pattern emergence remain unclear. Some theories hypothesize that patterns could result from a water-mediated scale-dependent feedback (SDF) whereby interactions favoring plant growth dominate at short distances and growth-inhibitory interactions dominate in the long range. However, we know little about how the presence of a focal plant affects the fitness of its neighbors as a function of the inter-individual distance, which is expected to be highly ecosystem-dependent. This lack of empirical knowledge and system dependency challenge the relevance of SDF as a unifying theory for vegetation pattern formation. Assuming that plant interactions are always…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcosystem dynamics and resilience · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
