Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence

Spatiotemporal patterns of vegetation are a characteristic feature of dryland ecosystems occurring on all continents except Antarctica. The development of an understanding of their ecosystem dynamics is an issue of considerable socio-economic importance as both the livestock and agricultural sectors...

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Main Author: Eigentler, Lukas
Other Authors: Sherratt, Jonathan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Mathematical and Computer Science 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10399/4359
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spelling ftheriotwattuniv:oai:www.ros.hw.ac.uk:10399/4359 2023-05-15T13:31:26+02:00 Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence Eigentler, Lukas Sherratt, Jonathan 2020-06 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10399/4359 en eng Mathematical and Computer Science Heriot-Watt University The University of Edinburgh http://hdl.handle.net/10399/4359 Thesis 2020 ftheriotwattuniv 2021-10-28T22:39:57Z Spatiotemporal patterns of vegetation are a characteristic feature of dryland ecosystems occurring on all continents except Antarctica. The development of an understanding of their ecosystem dynamics is an issue of considerable socio-economic importance as both the livestock and agricultural sectors in dryland economies heavily depend on ecosystem functioning. Mathematical modelling is a powerful tool to disentangle the complex ecosystem dynamics. In this thesis, I present theoretical models to explore the impact of nonlocal seed dispersal and temporal precipitation variability on dryland vegetation patterns and propose several mechanisms that enable species coexistence within vegetation patterns. To do so, I present extensions of the Klausmeier reaction-advection-diffusion model, a well-established model describing the ecohydrological dynamics of vegetation patterns. Model analyses focus on pattern onset at high precipitation values (i.e. on the transition from uniformly vegetated to spatially patterned states) to assess the impact of nonlocal seed dispersal and precipitation seasonality and intermittency, and on comprehensive bifurcation analyses, including results on pattern existence and stability to investigate coexistence of species in the mathematical framework. Results include the inhibition of pattern onset due to long-range seed dispersal and put emphasis on the functional response of plants to low soil moisture levels to understand effects of rainfall intermittency. Moreover, results suggest that coexistence is facilitated by resource heterogeneities induced by the plant’s spatial self-organisation and highlight the importance of considering out-of-equilibrium solutions. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grant EP/L016508/01) Scottish Funding Council Heriot-Watt University Thesis Antarc* Antarctica Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh: ROS - The Research Output Service
institution Open Polar
collection Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh: ROS - The Research Output Service
op_collection_id ftheriotwattuniv
language English
description Spatiotemporal patterns of vegetation are a characteristic feature of dryland ecosystems occurring on all continents except Antarctica. The development of an understanding of their ecosystem dynamics is an issue of considerable socio-economic importance as both the livestock and agricultural sectors in dryland economies heavily depend on ecosystem functioning. Mathematical modelling is a powerful tool to disentangle the complex ecosystem dynamics. In this thesis, I present theoretical models to explore the impact of nonlocal seed dispersal and temporal precipitation variability on dryland vegetation patterns and propose several mechanisms that enable species coexistence within vegetation patterns. To do so, I present extensions of the Klausmeier reaction-advection-diffusion model, a well-established model describing the ecohydrological dynamics of vegetation patterns. Model analyses focus on pattern onset at high precipitation values (i.e. on the transition from uniformly vegetated to spatially patterned states) to assess the impact of nonlocal seed dispersal and precipitation seasonality and intermittency, and on comprehensive bifurcation analyses, including results on pattern existence and stability to investigate coexistence of species in the mathematical framework. Results include the inhibition of pattern onset due to long-range seed dispersal and put emphasis on the functional response of plants to low soil moisture levels to understand effects of rainfall intermittency. Moreover, results suggest that coexistence is facilitated by resource heterogeneities induced by the plant’s spatial self-organisation and highlight the importance of considering out-of-equilibrium solutions. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grant EP/L016508/01) Scottish Funding Council Heriot-Watt University
author2 Sherratt, Jonathan
format Thesis
author Eigentler, Lukas
spellingShingle Eigentler, Lukas
Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
author_facet Eigentler, Lukas
author_sort Eigentler, Lukas
title Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
title_short Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
title_full Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
title_fullStr Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
title_full_unstemmed Modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
title_sort modelling dryland vegetation patterns : nonlocal dispersal, temporal variability in precipitation and species coexistence
publisher Mathematical and Computer Science
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10399/4359
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10399/4359
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