scholarly journals Ecological mechanisms underlying aridity thresholds in global drylands

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Berdugo ◽  
Blai Vidiella Rocamora ◽  
Ricard Solé ◽  
Fernando T. Maestre

With ongoing climate change, the probability of crossing environmental thresholds promoting abrupt changes in ecosystem structure and functioning is higher than ever. In drylands (sites where it rains less than 60% of what is evaporated), recent research has shown how the crossing of three particular aridity thresholds (defining three consecutive phases, namely vegetation decline, soil disruption and systemic breakdown) leads to abrupt changes on ecosystem structural and functional attributes. Despite the importance of these findings and their implications to develop effective monitoring and adaptation actions to combat climate change, we lack a proper understanding of the mechanisms unleashing these abrupt shifts.Here we revise and discuss multiple mechanisms that may explain the existence of aridity thresholds observed across global drylands, and discuss the potential amplification mechanisms that may underpin hypothetical abrupt temporal shifts with climate change. We found that each aridity threshold is likely involving specific processes. In the vegetation decline phase we review mainly physiological mechanisms of plant adaptation to water shortages as main cause of this threshold. In the second threshold we identified three pathways involving mechanisms that propagates changes from plants to soil leading to a soil disruption: erosive mechanisms, mechanisms linked to an aridity-induced shrub encroachment and mechanisms linked to nutrient cycling and circulation. Finally, in the systemic breakdown phase we reviewed plant-plant amplification mechanisms triggered by survival limits of plants that may cause sudden diversity losses and plant-atmospheric feedbacks that may link vegetation collapse with further and critical aridification. By identifying, revising and linking relevant mechanisms to each aridity threshold, we catalogued a set of specific hypotheses and recommendations based on identified knowledge gaps concerning the study of mechanisms of threshold emergence in drylands. Moreover, we were able to establish plausible factors that are context dependent and may influence the occurrence of abrupt changes in time and we created a mechanistic-based conceptual model on how abrupt changes may emerge as aridity increases. This has importance for focusing future research efforts on aridity thresholds and for developing strategies to track, adapt to or even revert these abrupt ecosystem changes in the future.

Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 367 (6479) ◽  
pp. 787-790 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Berdugo ◽  
Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo ◽  
Santiago Soliveres ◽  
Rocío Hernández-Clemente ◽  
Yanchuang Zhao ◽  
...  

Aridity, which is increasing worldwide because of climate change, affects the structure and functioning of dryland ecosystems. Whether aridification leads to gradual (versus abrupt) and systemic (versus specific) ecosystem changes is largely unknown. We investigated how 20 structural and functional ecosystem attributes respond to aridity in global drylands. Aridification led to systemic and abrupt changes in multiple ecosystem attributes. These changes occurred sequentially in three phases characterized by abrupt decays in plant productivity, soil fertility, and plant cover and richness at aridity values of 0.54, 0.7, and 0.8, respectively. More than 20% of the terrestrial surface will cross one or several of these thresholds by 2100, which calls for immediate actions to minimize the negative impacts of aridification on essential ecosystem services for the more than 2 billion people living in drylands.


Author(s):  
Neda Zawahri

Increasing populations, climate change, and industrialization are challenging states’ ability to meet domestic demands for scarce freshwater resources. In fact, world leaders and international organizations are warning of the increasing potential for interstate conflict and tension over transboundary rivers. Relying on qualitative and quantitative analysis, experts have analyzed means by which states can peacefully manage their transboundary basins. Despite substantial improvements in our understanding of some of the factors influencing riparian conflicts along with the forces leading to treaty formation, treaty design, and treaty effectiveness, several controversies remain, including the influence of the balance of power within the basin, the role of water shortages, and the effectiveness of treaties in managing transboundary water disputes. In addition, there are a number of understudied topics that require future research. These include the influence of climate change and increasing abstraction of groundwater resources on the management of transboundary water resources.


2009 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 1001-1010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard R. Schneider ◽  
Andreas Hamann ◽  
Dan Farr ◽  
Xianli Wang ◽  
Stan Boutin

We propose a new and relatively simple modification to extend the utility of bioclimatic envelope models for land-use planning and adaptation under climate change. In our approach, the trajectory of vegetation change is set by a bioclimatic envelope model, but the rate of transition is determined by a disturbance model. We used this new approach to explore potential changes in the distribution of ecosystems in Alberta, Canada, under alternative climate and disturbance scenarios. The disturbance model slowed the rate of ecosystem transition, relative to the raw projections of the bioclimatic envelope model. But even with these transition lags in place, a northward shift of grasslands into much of the existing parkland occurred over the 50 years of our simulation. There was also a conversion of 12%–21% of Alberta’s boreal region to parkland. In addition to aspatial projections, our simulations provide testable predictions about where ecosystem changes as a result of climate change are most likely to be initially observed. We also conducted an investigation of model uncertainty that provides an indication of the robustness of our findings and identifies fruitful avenues for future research.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena M. Müller ◽  
Michael Bahn

<p>As a consequence of climate change, extreme climatic events such as droughts will become more frequent and severe, affecting ecosystem structure and functioning, with implications for humans and society. While concurrent effects of drought events are comparatively well studied, the short- and longer-term changes in ecosystem structure and functioning triggered by drought (i.e. drought legacies) are far less understood. Furthermore, it has rarely been analysed how drought legacies alter the resistance to and recovery from subsequent drought events. To assess the overall impact of drought events on ecosystems and emerging cascading effects on societies, we need to advance the understanding of drought legacies and their long-lasting impacts on ecosystems. Based on a review of the literature on above- and belowground mechanisms underlying drought legacies in grasslands, we propose a conceptual framework, which identifies the factors determining the shape of potential legacy trajectories during recovery and post-recovery phases and synthesize the mechanisms leading to legacy responses to subsequent drought events.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. 004728162110078
Author(s):  
Shanna Cameron ◽  
Alexandra Russell ◽  
Luke Brake ◽  
Katherine Fredlund ◽  
Angela Morris

This article engages with recent discussions in the field of technical communication that call for climate change research that moves beyond the believer/denier dichotomy. For this study, our research team coded 900 tweets about climate change and global warming for different emotions in order to understand how Twitter users rely on affect rhetorically. Our findings use quantitative content analysis to challenge current assumptions about writing and affect on social media, and our results indicate a number of arenas for future research on affect, global warming, and rhetoric.


Games ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Tiziana Ciano ◽  
Massimiliano Ferrara ◽  
Mariangela Gangemi ◽  
Domenica Stefania Merenda ◽  
Bruno Antonio Pansera

This work aims to provide different perspectives on the relationships between cooperative game theory and the research field concerning climate change dynamics. New results are obtained in the framework of competitive bargaining solutions and related issues, moving from a cooperative approach to a competitive one. Furthermore, the dynamics of balanced and super-balanced games are exposed, with particular reference to coalitions. Some open problems are presented to aid future research in this area.


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