211 research outputs found

    Bistability and regular spatial patterns in arid ecosystems.

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    A variety of patterns observed in ecosystems can be explained by resource–concentration mechanisms. A resource–concentration mechanism occurs when organisms increase the lateral flow of a resource toward them, leading to a local concentration of this resource and to its depletion from areas farther away. In resource–concentration systems, it has been proposed that certain spatial patterns could indicate proximity to discontinuous transitions where an ecosystem abruptly shifts from one stable state to another. Here, we test this hypothesis using a model of vegetation dynamics in arid ecosystems. In this model, a resource– concentration mechanism drives a positive feedback between vegetation and soil water availability. We derived the conditions leading to bistability and pattern formation. Our analysis revealed that bistability and regular pattern formation are linked in our model. This means that, when regular vegetation patterns occur, they indicate that the system is along a discontinuous transition to desertification. Yet, in real systems, only observing regular vegetation patterns without identifying the pattern-driving mechanism might not be enough to conclude that an ecosystem is along a discontinuous transition because similar patterns can emerge from different ecological mechanisms

    Time-dependent, species-specific effects of N:P stoichiometry on grassland plant growth

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    N and P have different eutrophication effects on grassland communities, yet the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. To examine plant growth in response to the varying (relative) supply of N and P, we conducted a two-year greenhouse experiment. Five grasses and three herbs were grown with three N:P supply ratios at two overall nutrient supply levels. During the first year the plant growth was relatively low at both high and low N:P supply ratios, whereas during the second year the growth was especially low at a high N:P supply ratio. This second-year low growth was attributed to the high root death rate, which was influenced by a high N:P supply ratio rather than by the nutrient supply level. Species responded differently, especially in P uptake and loss at a high N:P supply ratio. Each species seemed to have a different strategy for P limitation, e.g. an efficient P uptake or a high P resorption rate. Species typical of P-limited grasslands had neither better P uptake nor better P retention at a high N:P supply ratio. This study quantitatively demonstrates an increased plant root death triggered by strong P limitation. This finding indicates a possible extra effect of N eutrophication on ecosystem functioning via changed N:P stoichiometr

    Nutrients and Hydrology Indicate the Driving Mechanisms of Peatland Surface Patterning

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    Peatland surface patterning motivates studies that identify underlying structuring mechanisms. Theoretical studies so far suggest that different mechanisms may drive similar types of patterning. The long time span associated with peatland surface pattern formation, however, limits possibilities for empirically testing model predictions by field manipulations. Here, we present a model that describes spatial interactions between vegetation, nutrients, hydrology, and peat. We used this model to study pattern formation as driven by three different mechanisms: peat accumulation, water ponding, and nutrient accumulation. By on-and-off switching of each mechanism, we created a full-factorial design to see how these mechanisms affected surface patterning (pattern of vegetation and peat height) and underlying patterns in nutrients and hydrology. Results revealed that different combinations of structuring mechanisms lead to similar types of peatland surface patterning but contrasting underlying patterns in nutrients and hydrology. These contrasting underlying patterns suggest that the presence or absence of the structuring mechanisms can be identified by relatively simple short-term field measurements of nutrients and hydrology, meaning that longer-term field manipulations can be circumvented. Therefore, this study provides promising avenues for future empirical studies on peatland patternin

    Нейтрализация ономастической семантики как фактор поэтики: об одном собственном имени в рок-тексте Б. Гребенщикова

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    Исследуется мотивированность поэтонима Аделаида в тексте песни Б. Гребенщикова. Данное имя, являющееся ключевым словом текста, мотивировано на различных текстовых уровнях. Выдвижение собственного имени, производимое на фонетическом и метрическом уровнях и сопровождаемое целенаправленной нейтрализацией его ономастической семантики, способствует превращению данного поэтонима в символ и делает его ключевым словом данного текста.На матеріалі имені Аделаіда у статті були розглянуті лінгвістичні механізми символічногоформування значення. Його символічне значення формується засобами фонетичного та метричного наголоса та нейтралізації деяких онімічних семантичних компонентів.The linguistic mechanisms of symbolic meaning's forming are being studied on the material of name Adelaide. Its symbolic meaning forms by means of phonetic and metrical emphasis and neutralization some of onym's semantic components

    De bodem als partner in duurzame ontwikkeling : een onderzoeksagenda voor de toekomst, Dutch Soil Platform, december 2008

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    "De uitdaging is een andere manier van werken, meer ontwikkelingsgericht, bij het verbinden van waterbeheer aan ruimtelijke ontwikkeling. We moeten leren werken met de initiatieven uit de samenleving. Niet kijken in hoeverre die bij onze kaders passen, maar of we onze kaders kunnen laten passen bij die initiatieven." aldus motiveert Annemieke Nijhof, DG Water, de gewenste, nieuwe benadering van bodem-, landschaps- en waterbelei

    Food web stability and weighted connectance:the complexity-stability debate revisited

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    How the complexity of food webs relates to stability has been a subject of many studies. Often, unweighted connectance is used to express complexity. Unweighted connectance is measured as the proportion of realized links in the network. Weighted connectance, on the other hand, takes link weights (fluxes or feeding rates) into account and captures the shape of the flux distribution. Here, we used weighted connectance to revisit the relation between complexity and stability. We used 15 real soil food webs and determined the feeding rates and the interaction strength matrices. We calculated both versions of connectance, and related these structural properties to food web stability. We also determined the skewness of both flux and interaction strength distributions with the Gini coefficient. We found no relation between unweighted connectance and food web stability, but weighted connectance was positively correlated with stability. This finding challenges the notion that complexity may constrain stability, and supports the ‘complexity begets stability’ notion. The positive correlation between weighted connectance and stability implies that the more evenly flux rates were distributed over links, the more stable the webs were. This was confirmed by the Gini coefficients of both fluxes and interaction strengths. However, the most even distributions of this dataset still were strongly skewed towards small fluxes or weak interaction strengths. Thus, incorporating these distribution with many weak links via weighted instead of unweighted food web measures can shed new light on classical theories
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