STEPWAT2: an individual-based model for exploring the impact of climate and disturbance on dryland plant communities
Authored by Kyle A Palmquist, John B Bradford, Trace E Martyn, Daniel R Schlaepfer, William K Lauenroth
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.2394
Sponsors:
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://zenodo.org/record/1306924#.XdmK2UVKhBw
Abstract
The combination of climate change and altered disturbance regimes is
directly and indirectly affecting plant communities by mediating
competitive interactions, resulting in shifts in species composition and
abundance. Dryland plant communities, defined by low soil water
availability and highly variable climatic regimes, are particularly
vulnerable to climatic changes that exceed their historical range of
variability. Individual-based simulation models can be important tools
to quantify the impacts of climate change, altered disturbance regimes,
and their interaction on demographic and community-level responses
because they represent competitive interactions between individuals and
individual responses to fluctuating environmental conditions. Here, we
introduce STEPWAT2, an individual plant-based simulation model for
exploring the joint influence of climate change and disturbance regimes
on dryland ecohydrology and plant community composition. STEPWAT2
utilizes a process-based soil water model (SOILWAT2) to simulate
available soil water in multiple soil layers, which plant individuals
compete for based on the temporal matching of water and active root
distributions with depth. This representation of resource utilization
makes STEPWAT2 particularly useful for understanding how changes in soil
moisture and altered disturbance regimes will concurrently impact
demographic and community-level responses in drylands. Our goals are
threefold: (1) to describe the core modules and functions within
STEPWAT2 (model description), (2) to validate STEPWAT2 model output
using field data from big sagebrush plant communities (model
validation), and (3) to highlight the usefulness of STEPWAT2 as a
modeling framework for examining the impacts of climate change and
disturbance regimes on dryland plant communities under future conditions
(model application). To address goals 2 and 3, we focus on 15 sites that
span the spatial extent of big sagebrush plant communities in the
western United States. For goal 3, we quantify how climate change, fire,
and grazing can interact to influence plant functional type biomass and
composition. We use big sagebrush-dominated plant communities to
demonstrate the functionality of STEPWAT2, as these communities are
among the most widespread dryland ecosystems in North America.
Tags
Individual-based model
Climate change
Grazing
Dryland
Fire
North-america
Great-plains
Disturbance
Soil
Relative abundance
Grassland
Functional types
Gap dynamics
Ecohydrology
Artemisia tridentata
Plant
simulation model
Sagebrush
Semiarid
Sagebrush artemisia-tridentata
Big sagebrush
Western
usa
Bromus-tectorum