Repositorio Institucional
Repositorio Institucional
CONICET Digital
  • Inicio
  • EXPLORAR
    • AUTORES
    • DISCIPLINAS
    • COMUNIDADES
  • Estadísticas
  • Novedades
    • Noticias
    • Boletines
  • Ayuda
    • General
    • Datos de investigación
  • Acerca de
    • CONICET Digital
    • Equipo
    • Red Federal
  • Contacto
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
  • INFORMACIÓN GENERAL
  • RESUMEN
  • ESTADISTICAS
 
Artículo

On the early warning signal of degradation in drylands: Patches or plants?

Oñatibia, Gastón RafaelIcon ; Aguiar, Martin RobertoIcon
Fecha de publicación: 02/2023
Editorial: Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc
Revista: Journal of Ecology
ISSN: 0022-0477
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de recurso: Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Ecología

Resumen

Global drylands are threatened by grazing pressure intensification and climate change, which act as major drivers of land degradation. Detecting this process at an early stage is essential for predicting losses of ecological functions and for restoration management. Vegetation patch-size distribution is an indicator of dryland multifunctionality and has been proposed as a warning signal for the onset of degradation processes. However, we proposed and tested a general model that stresses that patchiness may fail to detect degradation of the forage provision, depending on plant community species composition. This is a key aspect since forage provision is strongly associated with human well-being in drylands. We hypothesized that grazing-induced changes in patchiness and forage provision converge in drylands dominated by forage species but are decoupled in those dominated or co-dominated by non-forage species. We tested the conceptual model in a unique regional-scale gradient with strong ecological differences but a common biogeographical and human impact history to reduce local contingencies effects. We compared datasets of grazing intensification impacts on (i) plant cover and patch-size distribution and (ii) plant density and plant-size distribution of dominant forage grasses (a proxy of forage provisioning). We showed that there is a decoupling between grazing-induced changes in vegetation patchiness and forage provisioning, particularly in drylands where non-forage species are dominant. In these drylands, plant cover and patch-size distribution were slightly affected by grazing intensification, whereas plant density of forage species was decimated and their plant-size distributions were strongly skewed towards small sizes. Synthesis. Our dryland conceptual model suggests that global change impacts on forage species populations can be detected even before changes in patch-size distribution and plant cover. Our findings support the model and indicate that the population status (plant density and plant-size distribution) of forage species allows for predicting forage dynamics and is useful to the early detection of losses of ecosystem services linked to human well-being in drylands.
Palabras clave: CLIMATE CHANGE , DRYLAND DEGRADATION , FORAGE SPECIES , GRASSES , GRAZING INTENSIFICATION , PLANT-SIZE DISTRIBUTION , POPULATION ECOLOGY , VEGETATION PATCHINESS
Ver el registro completo
 
Archivos asociados
Tamaño: 833.5Kb
Formato: PDF
.
Solicitar
Licencia
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11336/221282
URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2745.14034
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.14034
Colecciones
Articulos(IFEVA)
Articulos de INST.D/INV.FISIOLOGICAS Y ECO.VINCULADAS A L/AGRIC
Citación
Oñatibia, Gastón Rafael; Aguiar, Martin Roberto; On the early warning signal of degradation in drylands: Patches or plants?; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Journal of Ecology; 111; 2; 2-2023; 428-435
Compartir
Altmétricas
 

Enviar por e-mail
Separar cada destinatario (hasta 5) con punto y coma.
  • Facebook
  • X Conicet Digital
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Sound Cloud
  • LinkedIn

Los contenidos del CONICET están licenciados bajo Creative Commons Reconocimiento 2.5 Argentina License

https://www.conicet.gov.ar/ - CONICET

Inicio

Explorar

  • Autores
  • Disciplinas
  • Comunidades

Estadísticas

Novedades

  • Noticias
  • Boletines

Ayuda

Acerca de

  • CONICET Digital
  • Equipo
  • Red Federal

Contacto

Godoy Cruz 2290 (C1425FQB) CABA – República Argentina – Tel: +5411 4899-5400 repositorio@conicet.gov.ar
TÉRMINOS Y CONDICIONES