Spatial Self-Organization of Vegetation Subject to Climatic Stress Insights from a System Dynamics Individual-Based Hybrid Model
Authored by Stefano Mazzoleni, Fabrizio Carteni, Francesco Giannino, Christian E Vincenot, Max Rietkerk
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.00636
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Java
AnyLogic
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In simulation models of populations or communities, individual plants
have often been obfuscated in favor of aggregated vegetation. This
simplification comes with a loss of biological detail and a smoothing
out of the demographic noise engendered by stochastic individual-scale
processes and heterogeneities, which is significant among others when
studying the viability of small populations facing challenging
fluctuating environmental conditions. This consideration has motivated
the development of precise plant-centered models. The accuracy gained in
the representation of plant biology has then, however, often been
balanced by the disappearance in models of important plant-soil
interactions (esp. water dynamics) due to the inability of most
individual-based frameworks to simulate complex continuous processes. In
this study, we used a hybrid modeling approach, namely integrated System
Dynamics (SD) Individual-based (IB), to illustrate the importance of
individual plant dynamics to explain spatial self-organization of
vegetation in arid environments. We analyzed the behavior of this model
under different parameter sets either related to individual plant
properties (such as seed dispersal distance and reproductive age) or the
environment (such as intensity and yearly distribution of precipitation
events). While the results of this work confirmed the prevailing theory
on vegetation patterning, they also revealed the importance therein of
plant-level processes that cannot be rendered by reaction-diffusion
models. Initial spatial distribution of plants, reproductive age, and
average seed dispersal distance, by impacting patch size and vegetation
aggregation, affected pattern formation and population survival under
climatic variations. Besides, changes in precipitation regime altered
the demographic structure and spatial organization of vegetation patches
by affecting plants differentially depending on their age and biomass.
Water availability influenced non-linearly total biomass density.
Remarkably, lower precipitation resulted in lower mean plant age yet
higher mean individual biomass. Moreover, seasonal variations in
rainfall greater than a threshold (here, +/-0.45 mm from the 1.3 mm
baseline) decreased mean total biomass and generated limit cycles, which, in the case of large variations, were preceded by chaotic
demographic and spatial behavior. In some cases, peculiar spatial
patterns (e.g., rings) were also engendered. On a technical note, the
shortcomings of the present model and the benefit of hybrid modeling for
virtual investigations in plant science are discussed.
Tags
Seed dispersal
Simulation-model
Cellular-automata
Plant-population dynamics
Semiarid grazing systems
Neighborhood
models
Pattern-formation
Soil feedback
Community dynamics
Arid ecosystems