2017 ESA Annual Meeting (August 6 -- 11)

COS 132-6 - Do spatially homogenising and heterogenising processes affect transitions between alternative stable states?

Thursday, August 10, 2017: 9:50 AM
E145, Oregon Convention Center
Thomas A. Groen, ITC - Natural Resources, University of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands, Frank Van Langevelde, Resource Ecology, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands and Claudius Van de Vijver, Plant Production Systems, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands
Background/Question/Methods

Large-scale sudden transitions in ecosystems are predicted as result of changing global climate. Current theory expects such sudden transitions especially to occur in spatially homogeneous ecosystems, whereas transitions in spatially heterogeneous systems will be more gradual. The spatial heterogeneity of ecosystems is determined as result of opposing spatial processes that are either increasing or decreasing heterogeneity. Hence, the relative strength of these opposing processes is expected to determine how sensitive the system is to transitions, which has not been explored to date. In our study, fire, as a spatially heterogenising process, and plant dispersion, as a spatially homogenising process, in tropical savannas were modelled to analyse how these processes affect the occurrence of sudden transitions from grass dominance to tree dominance. Savannas are expected to change due to precipitation changes towards either tree dominance or grass dominance.

Results/Conclusions

We found that high rates of grass dispersion can create homogeneous grass patches, but only when the spatial extent of fire is limited to small patches that are spread across the landscape. When fires occur in larger patches, a heterogeneous pattern is generated. In spatially heterogeneous savannas, we found a more gradual response to increasing grazing pressure compared to the sudden transitions when savannas are spatially homogeneous. The most sudden transitions were found in near-homogeneous grass distributions where the interaction between grazing, grass dispersion and fire led to a few homogeneous patches. Within these homogeneous patches, transitions were complete and sudden. We conclude that when spatially heterogenising processes are stronger than spatially homogenising processes, heterogeneous systems are created. In these systems sudden transitions are less likely to occur, because transitions at smaller scales are averaged over space. We discuss how this has implications for responses of savannas to climatic change.