Author
Pillsbury, Finn | |
Peters, Debra | |
OKIN, GREG - University Of California | |
DUNIWAY, MICHAEL - Us Geological Survey (USGS) | |
ANDERSON, JOHN - New Mexico State University | |
SALA, OSVALDO - Arizona State University | |
VIVONI, ENRIQUE - Arizona State University | |
Herrick, Jeffrey - Jeff | |
Havstad, Kris |
Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only Publication Acceptance Date: 7/16/2012 Publication Date: 9/10/2012 Citation: Pillsbury, F.C., Peters, D.C., Okin, G., Duniway, M., Anderson, J., Sala, O., Vivoni, E., Herrick, J.E., Havstad, K.M. 2012. Identifying thresholds in pattern-process relationships: a new cross-scale interactions experiment at the Jornada Basin LTER [abstract]. 2012 LTER All Scientists Meeting, September 10-13, 2012, Estes Park, Colorado. p. 43. Interpretive Summary: Technical Abstract: Interactions among ecological patterns and processes at multiple scales play a significant role in threshold behaviors in arid systems. Black grama grasslands and mesquite shrublands are hypothesized to operate under unique sets of feedbacks: grasslands are maintained by fine-scale biotic feedbacks promoting the retention of plant-available water that promotes grass establishment and persistence, while shrublands are maintained by broader-scale abiotic feedbacks promoting an increase in bare ground connectivity and redistribution of material by wind that promote shrub expansion. We recently established a large-scale, long-term manipulative experiment to test these hypotheses in order to identify the threshold distribution of bare gaps beyond which plant-scale processes are overwhelmed by abiotic drivers to shift grassland system into shrublands. In a 2 x 2 factorial design at 15 experimental blocks arrayed along an existing gradient of bare ground connectivity, we manipulated a plant-scale biotic process and a patch-scale abiotic process to measure the relative importance of these controls on primary production, soil water dynamics, and other ecological responses. All mesquite shrubs were killed to manipulate plant-scale competition for resources. We installed small fence-like structures (connectivity modifiers, or ConMods) to manipulate bare ground connectivity of surface soil and plant material by wind at a patch scale. This experiment will improve understanding of the role of cross-scale interactions that lead to threshold dynamics across mixed lifeform ecotones. |