Abstract
Spatial heterogeneity is a hallmark of vegetation patterns in arid and semiarid landscapes. First observed in terms of the spatial array of vegetation patches, spatial heterogeneity is now more broadly interpreted as the cumulative out- come of the processes affecting the spatial and temporal distribution of vital resources such as water, topsoil organic matter, and propagules individually and collectively. Spatial resource redistribution is shown to be important at a variety of scales varying from millimetres to hundreds of metres and beyond and can be conveniently studied as a nested spatial hierarchy.The processes by which heterogeneous resource distribution arises are a mixture of physical and biological and can be represented by an information-structuring concep- tual framework, which is described. Heterogeneity is crucial to the function- ing of arid and semiarid lands, and changes in the scale of heterogeneity can be used to study and understand the processes underlying desertification and rehabilitation. Models of heterogeneous landscapes in semiarid landscapes have had two broad themes: a pragmatic approach, describing ecosystem function in landscapes under management, and a curiosity-driven approach, speculating about the de novo development of landscape heterogeneity.
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CITATION STYLE
Tongway, D. J., & Ludwig, J. A. (2007). Heterogeneity in Arid and Semiarid Lands. In Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes (pp. 189–205). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-24091-8_10
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