2018 ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10)

OOS 31-2 - State change and connectivity: Essential linkages in drylands

Thursday, August 9, 2018: 1:50 PM
346-347, New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center
Greg Okin, Department of Geography, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, Enrique R. Vivoni, School of Earth and Space Exploration & School of Sustainable Engineering and Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ and Osvaldo E. Sala, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
Background/Question/Methods

Drylands are characterized as much by high spatial and temporal variability as they are by low precipitation. Cover that is patchy at multiple scales allows connectivity for wind and water transport. Vegetation dynamics at interannual scales occurs in the context of community change (including woody encroachment) at decadal scales. Periods of drought alternate with relatively wet periods. Future predictions for the world’s drylands are that many will become more arid, but near all will experience greater climate variability. This work explores how future variability will affect transport by wind and water, both of which are crucial elements of biotic-abiotic feedbacks that control community change in drylands.

Results/Conclusions

We find strong relationships between vegetation community, precipitation and aeolian transport related to changes in connectivity. We further identify strong, scale-dependent relationships between precipitation and runoff. Thus, aeolian transport decreases with increasing annual precipitation and transport by water increases with annual precipitation, with the combined effect that increased variability in annual precipitation is likely to increase both water and wind transport. The consequence of this is that feedbacks associated with community change are likely to strengthen in the future.