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      Ecological feedbacks. Termite mounds can increase the robustness of dryland ecosystems to climatic change.

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Animals, Climate Change, Conservation of Natural Resources, Desert Climate, Ecosystem, Feedback, Isoptera, physiology, Models, Biological, Plant Development, Rain, Soil, Water

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          Abstract

          Self-organized spatial vegetation patterning is widespread and has been described using models of scale-dependent feedback between plants and water on homogeneous substrates. As rainfall decreases, these models yield a characteristic sequence of patterns with increasingly sparse vegetation, followed by sudden collapse to desert. Thus, the final, spot-like pattern may provide early warning for such catastrophic shifts. In many arid ecosystems, however, termite nests impart substrate heterogeneity by altering soil properties, thereby enhancing plant growth. We show that termite-induced heterogeneity interacts with scale-dependent feedbacks to produce vegetation patterns at different spatial grains. Although the coarse-grained patterning resembles that created by scale-dependent feedback alone, it does not indicate imminent desertification. Rather, mound-field landscapes are more robust to aridity, suggesting that termites may help stabilize ecosystems under global change. Copyright © 2015, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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          A theory of biological pattern formation

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            Regular pattern formation in real ecosystems.

            Localized ecological interactions can generate striking large-scale spatial patterns in ecosystems through spatial self-organization. Possible mechanisms include oscillating consumer-resource interactions, localized disturbance-recovery processes and scale-dependent feedback. Despite abundant theoretical literature, studies revealing spatial self-organization in real ecosystems are limited. Recently, however, many examples of regular pattern formation have been discovered, supporting the importance of scale-dependent feedback. Here, we review these studies, showing regular pattern formation to be a general phenomenon rather than a peculiarity. We provide a conceptual framework explaining how scale-dependent feedback determines regular pattern formation in ecosystems. More empirical studies are needed to better understand regular pattern formation in ecosystems, and how this affects the response of ecosystems to global environmental change.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                25657247
                10.1126/science.1261487

                Chemistry
                Animals,Climate Change,Conservation of Natural Resources,Desert Climate,Ecosystem,Feedback,Isoptera,physiology,Models, Biological,Plant Development,Rain,Soil,Water

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