Understanding Tree–Grass Coexistence and Impacts of Disturbance and Resource Variability in Savannas

2010 ◽  
pp. 297-312 ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2011 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan R J McAllister ◽  
John G. Tisdell ◽  
Andrew F. Reeson ◽  
Iain J. Gordon

Author(s):  
David K. Click ◽  
Houtan Moaveni ◽  
Kristopher O. Davis ◽  
Richard H. Meeker ◽  
Robert M. Reedy ◽  
...  

Solar Energy ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 101-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Woei L. Saw ◽  
Peijun Guo ◽  
Philip J. van Eyk ◽  
Graham J. Nathan

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian John ◽  
Douglas Miller ◽  
Eric S. Post

Spring green-up in Arctic and alpine systems is predominantly controlled by temperature and snowmelt timing preceding and during the growing season. Variation in the timing of green-up across space is an important aspect of resource variability with which mobile herbivores must contend. Here, we measure the explanatory power of abiotic drivers of green-up in a Low Arctic region of west Greenland, host to a migratory caribou population. We identify inconsistent relationships between green-up and abiotic drivers across space. While green-up timing is most closely related to snowmelt in some areas, in others it is most closely related to spring temperature. The negative correlation between the explanatory power of snowmelt and temperature suggests that at broad scales, where green-up is more constrained by snow cover, such as moist, mountainous coastal areas, it is less constrained by temperature. Where snow is less persistent through winter, such as cold, dry inland areas, temperature becomes the predominant factor driving green-up. If the principal driver of spring plant growth is inconsistent across a region, long-term trends in resource phenology could vary spatially. For seasonal migrants like caribou, synchronizing migration timing with resource phenology may be complicated by discordant interannual change across drivers of green-up timing.


2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 137 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Sternberg ◽  
Stephen Balcombe ◽  
Jonathan Marshall ◽  
Jaye Lobegeiger

To examine how food resource availability links with natural variation in primary productivity in the Moonie River, south-west Queensland, the diets of two native Australian fish species (Nematalosa erebi and Macquaria ambigua) were examined from fifteen waterholes in February, May and September 2006. N. erebi diets reflected strong ‘boom and bust’ patterns of food consumption, with high concentrations of benthic (non-filamentous) algae during boom (flow) times, moving to higher concentrations of filamentous algae and detritus during bust (no flow) periods. M. ambigua diets were primarily dominated by aquatic insects in all sampling periods. Although there was no clear ‘boom to bust’ pattern in relation to flow, M. ambigua secondary prey consumption revealed a compensatory switch between high energy prey (crustaceans) during more productive periods with terrestrial insects during less productive periods. The ability of both species of fish to switch from high to low concentrations of food quality under a variable environmental background allows them to persist through both high productive and low productive periods. This interaction between native biota and variable ‘boom’ and ‘bust’ conditions, and how changes to the natural hydrology will affect it is an important consideration of any future water resource development plans.


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