An individual-based model of alpine plant distributions
Authored by HC Humphries, DP Coffin, WK Lauenroth
Date Published: 1996
DOI: 10.1016/0304-3800(94)00144-8
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Our objective was to evaluate the relationships between alpine plant
distributions and environmental conditions in order to predict the
spatial distribution of major alpine plant communities found along the
Front Range of the Rocky Mountains in the western U.S. Our approach was
to modify the individual plant-based STEPPE model to simulate plant
responses for three alpine communities found on Niwot Ridge, Colorado, USA: fellfield, dry meadow, and wet meadow. We used the alpine model to
evaluate the relationship between alpine plants and their environment
both for conditions typical of each community and for conditions along a
gradient that includes transitions between communities. We also analyzed
model behavior using sensitivity analysis, and tested the ability of the
model to simulate alpine plant community dynamics using verification and
validation procedures.
The individual plant-based alpine model tracks the recruitment, growth, and mortality of individual plants on a small plot (0.09 m(2)) through
time at an annual time step. Eighteen species with the greatest
abundance in fellfield, dry meadow, and moist meadow communities, and
representing a range of life history characteristics and environmental
responses are included. Environmental factors in the model are average
daily maximum temperature during the growing season, growing season soil
water availability, snow depth, and disturbances. Recruitment and
mortality by species have elements of stochasticity whereas growth of an
individual plant is determined by resource availability and abundance of
plants.
Patterns of species composition and aboveground biomass simulated by the
model were in general agreement with observations from the three alpine
communities. Simulated fellfield communities were dominated by cushion
plants, dry meadow communities were dominated by Kobresia myosuroides
and Acomastylis rossii, and moist meadow communities were dominated by
Acomastylis rossii and Deschampsia caespitosa. Shifts in species
composition and dominance were observed along the two environmental
gradients investigated (soil water availability and snow depth). Cushion
plants dominated areas of low soil water and snow depth representative
of fellfield conditions. A shift to graminoid-dominated vegetation, in
particular IC myosuroides, occurred over a narrow range of soil water
conditions and snow depth. At high soil water and snow depth, this
species decreased in biomass as a result of snow-induced mortality, and
a forb and graminoid species (A. rossii and D. caespitosa, respectively)
dominated the vegetation. The transition from dry meadow to moist meadow
was more gradual than the transition from fellfield to dry meadow.
Tags
Dynamics
USA
Forest
Succession
Disturbance
History
Grassland
Niwot ridge
Front range
Colorado