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ARS Home » Plains Area » Las Cruces, New Mexico » Range Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #227839

Title: Feedbacks between aeolian processes, vegetation productivity, and nutrient flux in deserts

Author
item OKIN, GREGORY - UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES
item LI, JUNRAN - UNIV OF VIRGINIA
item ALVAREZ, LORELEI - UNIV OF VIRGINIA
item Peters, Debra
item D'ODORICO, PAOLO - UNIV OF VIRGINIA

Submitted to: Geological Society of America Meeting
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/10/2008
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Wind is a key abiotic factor that influences the dynamics of arid and semiarid systems. A series of experiments and models will be presented that show the important feedbacks that exist between Aeolian processes and biotic process in deserts. Wind impacts vegetation by both changing the composition of the soils, mainly by winnowing fines from erosional areas and redeposition of fines in deposition areas, and by direct physical effects on plants. The former leads to significant loss and redistribution of soil organic matter and plant nutrients as well as the disruption of nutrient cycling process. The latter leads to burial, pedestaling, leaf stripping and branch abrasion that lead to increased plant mortality. There is significant evidence that this leads to state changes in deserts, namely replacement of grasses by shrubs, which in turn create landscapes that are far larger emitters of dust. Changes in aridity have, in the past, caused changes variations in dust emission associated with vegetation state changes and, models suggest, aeolian processes will be increasingly important in vegetation change and dust emissions in deserts.