Belowground Controls on the Dynamics of Plant Communities
Abstract
Arid regions are characterized by high variability in the arrival of rainfall, and species found in these areas have adapted mechanisms to ensure the capture of this scarce resource. In particular, the rooting strategies employed by vegetation can be critical to their survival. These rooting strategies also dictate the competitive outcomes within plant communities. A dynamic rooting scheme was incorporated into tRIBS+VEGGIE (a physically-based, distributed ecohydrologic model). The dynamic rooting scheme allows vegetation the freedom to alter its rooting profile in response to changes in rainfall and soil conditions, in a way that more closely mimics observed phenotypic plasticity. A simple competition-colonization model was combined with the new dynamic root scheme to explore the role of root adaptability in plant competition and landscape evolution in semi-arid environments. The influence of model representation of rooting strategy on the long term plant community composition
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFM.H11G1224S
- Keywords:
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- 0466 BIOGEOSCIENCES Modeling;
- 1813 HYDROLOGY Eco-hydrology;
- 1847 HYDROLOGY Modeling