Linking habitat modification to catastrophic shifts and vegetation patterns in bogs
Publication date
2007
Authors
Eppinga, M.B.
Rietkerk, M.G.
Wassen, M.J.
Ruiter, P.C. de
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Paleoecological studies indicate that
peatland ecosystems may exhibit bistability. This
would mean that these systems are resilient to
gradual changes in climate, until environmental
thresholds are passed. Then, ecosystem stability is
lost and rapid shifts in surface and vegetation
structure at landscape scale occur. Another remarkable
feature is the commonly observed self-organized
spatial vegetation patterning, such as string-flark
and maze patterns. Bistability and spatial selforganization
may be mechanistically linked, the
crucial mechanism being scale-dependent (locally
positive and longer-range negative) feedback between vegetation and the peatland environment. Focusing
on bogs, a previous model study shows that nutrient
accumulation by vascular plants can induce such
scale-dependent feedback driving pattern formation.
However, stability of bog microforms such as
hummocks and hollows has been attributed to
different local interactions between Sphagnum,
vascular plants, and the bog environment. Here we
analyze both local and longer-range interactions in
bogs to investigate the possible contribution of these
different interactions to vegetation patterning and
stability. This is done by a literature review, and
subsequently these findings are incorporated in the
original model. When Sphagnum and encompassing
local interactions are included in this model,
the boundaries between vegetation types become
sharper and also the parameter region of bistability
drastically increases. These results imply that
vegetation patterning and stability of bogs could
be synergistically governed by local and longerrange
interactions. Studying the relative effect of
these interactions is therefore suggested to be an
important component of future predictions on the
response of peatland ecosystems to climatic
changes.
Keywords
Alternate stable states, Bog model, Climate change, Self-organization, Vegetation, patchiness, Vegetation switches