Grazing duration and intensity modulate vegetation dynamics in semi-arid ecosystems with seasonal succession
Junhong Gan, Guohong Zhang, Xiaoli Wang

TL;DR
This paper develops a novel seasonal model to analyze how grazing duration and intensity affect vegetation dynamics and species competition in semi-arid ecosystems.
Contribution
It introduces a piecewise periodic model with thresholds for vegetation persistence and competition outcomes influenced by grazing regimes.
Findings
Critical thresholds for dry season and grazing durations determine species persistence.
Grazing parameters influence whether species coexist, are excluded, or exhibit bistability.
Numerical simulations illustrate bifurcations and phase transitions under different grazing regimes.
Abstract
This study investigates the impacts of grazing duration and intensity on vegetation population dynamics in semi-arid ecosystems characterized by seasonal succession. A novel piecewise periodic model is proposed, dividing the annual cycle into three distinct phases: dry season, growth period and grazing period in wet season. We derive critical thresholds for the durations of the dry season and grazing period that determine the persistence or extinction of a single vegetation species. For two competing species, we analyze how grazing parameters influence competitive outcomes, including exclusion, coexistence, and bistability. Theoretical results are supported by numerical simulations, which illustrate bifurcation diagrams and phase transitions under varying grazing regimes. Our findings provide actionable insights for sustainable grazing management in arid and semi-arid regions.
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