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  3. Patterned vegetation
  4. 2002
Showing papers on "Patterned vegetation published in 2002"
Journal Article•10.1086/342078•
Self-organization of vegetation in arid ecosystems

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Max Rietkerk1, Maarten C. Boerlijst2, F. van Langevelde3, Reinier HilleRisLambers2, van de Johan Koppel, Lalit Kumar4, H.H.T. Prins3, A. de Roos2 •
Utrecht University1, University of Amsterdam2, Wageningen University and Research Centre3, ITC Enschede4
01 Oct 2002-The American Naturalist
TL;DR: The results show that self-organized vegetation patterns observed in arid ecosystems might all be the result of spatial self-organization, caused by one single mechanism: water infiltrates faster into vegetated ground than into bare soil, leading to net displacement of surface water to vegetated patches.
Abstract: Scientists are still searching for possible unifying mechanisms to explain this range of spatial patterns (Tongway and Ludwig 2001), and an important question of this research is whether this range is the result of preexisting environmental heterogeneity, the result of spatial selforganization, or both (Klausmeier 1999; Couteron and Lejeune 2001; HilleRisLambers et al. 2001; Von Hardenberg et al. 2001). Here, we contribute to the ongoing debate about vegetation pattern formation in arid ecosystems by presenting novel, spatially explicit model analyses and results, extending on the work of HilleRisLambers et al. (2001). Our results show that these different vegetation patterns observed in arid ecosystems might all be the result of spatial self-organization, caused by one single mechanism: water infiltrates faster into vegetated ground than into bare soil, leading to net displacement of surface water to vegetated patches. This model differs from earlier model results (Klausmeier 1999; Couteron and Lejeune 2001; HilleRisLambers et al. 2001; Von Hardenberg et al. 2001) primarily in two ways: it is fully mechanistic, and it treats the lateral flow of water above and below the soil as separate, not independent, variables. Although the current model greatly simplifies the biophysics of arid systems, it can reproduce the whole range of distinctive vegetation patterns as observed in arid ecosystems, indicating that the proposed mechanism might be generally applicable. We further show that self-organized vegetation patterns can persist far into regions of high aridity, where plants would become extinct if homogeneously distributed, pointing to the importance of this mechanism for maintaining productivity of arid ecosystems (Noy-Meir 1973). Our analyses are based on the model first developed in HilleRisLambers et al. (2001)

770 citations

Journal Article•10.1080/01431160110107699•
Quantifying change in patterned semi-arid vegetation by Fourier analysis of digitized aerial photographs

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Pierre Couteron
01 Jan 2002-International Journal of Remote Sensing
TL;DR: In this article, aerial photographs from 1955 and 1985 (scale: 1:50 000) were used to quantify changes in semi-arid patterned vegetation caused by a succession of dry years in the early 1980s.
Abstract: Panchromatic aerial photographs from 1955 and 1985 (scale: 1:50 000) were used to quantify changes in semi-arid patterned vegetation caused by a succession of dry years in the early 1980s. The study site is located in the northwest part of Burkina Faso (West Africa), and features a plain with a savanna physiognomy and gentle slopes covered by tiger bush. Digitized data (pixel size of 3.15 m) covered a belt transect of 9 km by 1.5 km that has been divided into 315 m 2 square quadrats. Four reference quadrats were digitized with a pixel of 0.83 m, for comparison with high-resolution outlooks from 1994. Pattern quantification relied on spectral analysis by Fourier transform, that yielded dominant wavelengths (radial spectrum) and main orientations (angular spectrum). The vegetation in the plain displayed important changes that were related to the collapse of the herbaceous cover (and associated scattered trees), and its partial post-drought recovery. Such changes were quantified as a relative decline of smal...

93 citations

Journal Article•10.1103/PHYSREVE.66.010901•
Localized vegetation patches: A self-organized response to resource scarcity

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Olivier Lejeune1, Mustapha Tlidi1, Pierre Couteron2•
Université libre de Bruxelles1, École Normale Supérieure2
29 Jul 2002-Physical Review E
TL;DR: It is shown that spatial self-organization allows vegetation to survive greater resource limitation and is interpreted as localized structures arising from the bistability between the bare state and the patchy vegetation state.
Abstract: We show that spatial self-organization allows vegetation to survive greater resource limitation. Isolated vegetation patches observed in nutrient-poor territories of South America and West Africa are interpreted as localized structures arising from the bistability between the bare state and the patchy vegetation state.

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