Biocomplexity, Spatial Scale and Fragmentation: Implications for Arid and Semi-Arid Ecosystems

This proposal argues that spatial complexity of vegetation plays a central role in the structure and function of temporally variable, arid and semi-arid ecosystems. Complexity results from movement-mediated linking of less complex spatial units b...

This proposal argues that spatial complexity of vegetation plays a central role in the structure and function of temporally variable, arid and semi-arid ecosystems. Complexity results from movement-mediated linking of less complex spatial units by herbivores and humans into spatially extensive, complex systems. But modern human land use and land tenure systems tend to deplete spatial biocomplexity through fragmentation of ecosystems into isolated and simplified units. Ecosystem fragmentation is often justified as a means of economic intensification in the neo-classical framework, but in fact, it costs money to replace the natural capital lost through fragmentation. As a result of fragmentation, many of the worlds arid and semi-arid grazed ecosystems are dysfunctional to varying degrees.

The goal of this project is to demonstrate the importance of spatial complexity, the costs of fragmentation, and to identify options for sustainability at sites around the world by linking ecological and socio-economic research, and in the process, create an international network of scientists addressing these issues. The project focuses on 21 sites in nine countries on four continents. The interdisciplinary scientific team includes ecologists, anthropologists, economists, and political scientists. The project will include case study syntheses, field-based investigations, and model experiments and analyses. The project is expected to promote a higher level of understanding of spatial-temporal distribution of complexity, its importance in grazed systems, why and how complexity is reduced through fragmentation, and what this means for ecosystems and economic activities.

Investigator(s)

Lead Investigator(s):

N. Thompson Hobbs

Other Investigator(s):

Randall Boone, Philip Thornton

Attributes

Location: nine countries, four continents

Spatial Scope: global synthesis

Natural System: arid, semi-arid grasslands

Human System: land use

URL: N. Thompson Hobbs' website

Related Publications

A Reanalysis of the Body Mass Scaling of Trampling by Large Herbivores
Assessing Impacts of Large Herbivores on Shrubs: Tests of Scaling Factors for Utilization Rates from Shoot-Level Measurements
Large Herbivores in Sagebrush Steppe Ecosystems: Livestock and Wild Ungulates Influence Structure and Function
Hydrologic, Geomorphic and Climatic Processes Controlling Willow Establishment in a Montane Ecosystem
Research Article Canopy Dynamics and Human Caused Disturbance on a Semi-Arid Landscape in the Rocky Mountains, USA
Gain Functions for Large Herbivores: Tests of Alternative Models
Large Herbivores Influence the Composition and Diversity of Shrub-Steppe Communities in the Rocky Mountains, USA
Should I Stay or Should I Go? Patch Departure Decisions by Herbivores at Multiple Scales

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