TY - JOUR
T1 - Pattern formation - A missing link in the study of ecosystem response to environmental changes
AU - Meron, Ehud
N1 - Funding Information: This paper describes the works of many students and colleagues of mine, including Golan Bel, Erez Gilad, Lev Haim, Jost von Hardenberg, Shai Kinast, Assaf Kletter, Paris Kyriazopoulos, Yair Mau, Jonathan Nathan, Yagil Osem, Antonello Provenzale, Moshe Shachak, Hezi Yizhaq, and Yuval Zelnik. The support of the Israel Science Foundation (Grants no. 305/13 and 861/09), the US - Israel Binational Science Foundation (Grant No. 2008241), the James S. McDonnell Foundation (Grant no. 220020056) and the Ministry of Science, Technology and Space, is gratefully acknowledged. Publisher Copyright: © 2015 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - Environmental changes can affect the functioning of an ecosystem directly, through the response of individual life forms, or indirectly, through interspecific interactions and community dynamics. The feasibility of a community-level response has motivated numerous studies aimed at understanding the mutual relationships between three elements of ecosystem dynamics: the abiotic environment, biodiversity and ecosystem function. Since ecosystems are inherently nonlinear and spatially extended, environmental changes can also induce pattern-forming instabilities that result in spatial self-organization of life forms and resources. This, in turn, can affect the relationships between these three elements, and make the response of ecosystems to environmental changes far more complex. Responses of this kind can be expected in dryland ecosystems, which show a variety of self-organizing vegetation patterns along the rainfall gradient. This paper describes the progress that has been made in understanding vegetation patterning in dryland ecosystems, and the roles it plays in ecosystem response to environmental variability. The progress has been achieved by modeling pattern-forming feedbacks at small spatial scales and up-scaling their effects to large scales through model studies. This approach sets the basis for integrating pattern formation theory into the study of ecosystem dynamics and addressing ecologically significant questions such as the dynamics of desertification, restoration of degraded landscapes, biodiversity changes along environmental gradients, and shrubland-grassland transitions.
AB - Environmental changes can affect the functioning of an ecosystem directly, through the response of individual life forms, or indirectly, through interspecific interactions and community dynamics. The feasibility of a community-level response has motivated numerous studies aimed at understanding the mutual relationships between three elements of ecosystem dynamics: the abiotic environment, biodiversity and ecosystem function. Since ecosystems are inherently nonlinear and spatially extended, environmental changes can also induce pattern-forming instabilities that result in spatial self-organization of life forms and resources. This, in turn, can affect the relationships between these three elements, and make the response of ecosystems to environmental changes far more complex. Responses of this kind can be expected in dryland ecosystems, which show a variety of self-organizing vegetation patterns along the rainfall gradient. This paper describes the progress that has been made in understanding vegetation patterning in dryland ecosystems, and the roles it plays in ecosystem response to environmental variability. The progress has been achieved by modeling pattern-forming feedbacks at small spatial scales and up-scaling their effects to large scales through model studies. This approach sets the basis for integrating pattern formation theory into the study of ecosystem dynamics and addressing ecologically significant questions such as the dynamics of desertification, restoration of degraded landscapes, biodiversity changes along environmental gradients, and shrubland-grassland transitions.
KW - Desertification
KW - Ecosystem engineers
KW - Functional diversity
KW - Homoclinic snaking
KW - Spatial resonances
KW - Vegetation pattern formation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84962224288&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2015.10.015
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mbs.2015.10.015
M3 - Article
C2 - 26529391
SN - 0025-5564
VL - 271
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Mathematical Biosciences
JF - Mathematical Biosciences
ER -