Disordered hyperuniformity signals functioning and resilience of self-organized vegetation patterns
Wensi Hu, Quan-Xing Liu, Bo Wang, Nuo Xu, Lijuan Cui, Chi Xu

TL;DR
This study reveals that disordered hyperuniformity, a hidden order in spatial vegetation patterns, can enhance ecosystem functioning and resilience in drylands, expanding understanding of ecological self-organization.
Contribution
It identifies disordered hyperuniformity in natural vegetation and proposes mechanisms for its emergence, linking it to ecosystem resilience and function.
Findings
Disordered hyperuniform vegetation states are common in drylands.
Hyperuniformity correlates with improved soil moisture acquisition.
Such patterns may slow ecosystem recovery after disturbances.
Abstract
In harsh environments, organisms may self-organize into spatially patterned systems in various ways. So far, studies of ecosystem spatial self-organization have primarily focused on apparent orders reflected by regular patterns. However, self-organized ecosystems may also have cryptic orders that can be unveiled only through certain quantitative analyses. Here we show that disordered hyperuniformity as a striking class of hidden orders can exist in spatially self-organized vegetation landscapes. By analyzing the high-resolution remotely sensed images across the American drylands, we demonstrate that it is not uncommon to find disordered hyperuniform vegetation states characterized by suppressed density fluctuations at long range. Such long-range hyperuniformity has been documented in a wide range of microscopic systems. Our finding contributes to expanding this domain to accommodate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcosystem dynamics and resilience · Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies · Plant and animal studies
Methods7 Fastest Ways to Call American Airlines Reservations Number (USA Guide)
