"Vegetation patterns" refer to the way plants and trees are naturally arranged or distributed in an area, creating different visual designs and arrangements.
Full definition
Evidence that local land use practices influence regional climate and
vegetation patterns in adjacent natural areas.
My paper concerns a relatively simple model
for vegetation patterning, and I have been able to exploit this simplicity to obtain detailed mathematical predictions,» explains Sherratt.
Self -
organized vegetation patterns are widespread in arid lands and elsewhere, and Rietkerk et al. [11]--[12] as well as Couteron and Lejeune [13]--[15] proposed that such patterns are the result of nearby positive and distant negative feedbacks created by plants and physical processes occurring at different scales and intensities.
Significant steps have been taken in linking the atmosphere and the terrestrial systems although the focus tends to be on water - energy and the biosphere with
fixed vegetation patterns.
Far more certainly there will be changes in surface reflectivity; changes in snow and ice cover, open water area, regions of desert,
vegetation patterns etc..
Even if we stopped emitting greenhouse gases today, fire conditions will become even more persistent in areas already at risk, and will spread to new regions as warming
drives vegetation patterns and land - use changes.
Climate change will drastically change
vegetation patterns in the Arctic, which will in turn spur additional warming, according to a new study.
«For example, regions with more or less precipitation may have
different vegetation patterns, which can alter the abundance of insects, the primary food resource for these birds,» she said.
«
Vegetation patterns are a common feature in semi-arid environments, occurring in Africa, Australia and North America,» explains Sherratt.
Thus, Huisman said, Tarnita and her co-authors showed that
vegetation patterns that currently might be interpreted as the onset of desertification could mean the total opposite — that plants are persevering thanks to termite mounds.
In 1960 Nelson Hairston, Frederick Smith, and Lawrence Slobodkin (HSS) proposed that
vegetation patterns are determined primarily by patterns of food consumption by herbivores.
Additionally,
vegetation patterns and forest connectivity, and the feedback between these and fire, play an important role in how climate - driven changes in fire regimes are likely to play out over the long term (McKenzie and Littell 2017).
Additional positive feedbacks which play an important role in this process include other greenhouse gases, and changes in ice sheet cover and
vegetation patterns.
However, unless there is a regular and progressive change in
the vegetation pattern around the station, this would not produce an ongoing change of any bias.
In order to achieve a better understanding of fire, it must be understood as an integral Earth system process that links and influences regional and global biogeochemical cycles, human activity, and
vegetation patterns.