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Detection of critical densities associated with pinon-juniper woodland ecotones

The interfaces between piñon-juniper canopies and grasslands in the south-western USA present an opportunity to use the modern theory of spatial phase transitions as a formal characterization of ecotone structure. The theory requires an estimation of a critical value of tree cover at which the woodl...

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Published in:Ecology (Durham) 1996-04, Vol.77 (3), p.805-821
Main Authors: Milne, Bruce T., Johnson, Alan R., Keitt, Timothy H., Hatfield, Colleen A., David, John, Hraber, Peter T.
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container_title Ecology (Durham)
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creator Milne, Bruce T.
Johnson, Alan R.
Keitt, Timothy H.
Hatfield, Colleen A.
David, John
Hraber, Peter T.
description The interfaces between piñon-juniper canopies and grasslands in the south-western USA present an opportunity to use the modern theory of spatial phase transitions as a formal characterization of ecotone structure. The theory requires an estimation of a critical value of tree cover at which the woodlands switch abruptly from a fragmented collection of small patches of trees to a network of connected canopies. Presumably, this transition is associated with critical environmental conditions that regulate the ecologies of trees vs. grasses. We developed and tested a new method to estimate the critical cover value of woodlands on complex terrain. The method was based on multiscale assessments of the associations between local tree coverage and two types of patch edge. Tests on artificial gradient percolation maps revealed an interaction between the type of edge used ("hull edge," which is based on only the orthogonal connections between canopy-occupied cells, vs. "accessible edge," which is based on both orthogonal and diagonal connections between canopy-occupied cells) and the neighborhood rule used to define a cluster (von Neumann 5-cell or Moore 9-cell). When applied to digitized, geographically referenced aerial photographs, the method indicated that areas ≤ 6.6 ha exhibited the theoretical critical value of 59.3% cover predicted for square lattices and the 5-cell neighborhood. Construction of both edge types on a given map can reveal locations of steep environmental gradients that may be buffered against modest climate fluctuations. The edges can be used in the calibration of independent variables to predict tree cover. The agreement between the expected and observed critical densities will motivate extensions of phase transition theory to studies of ecotones in real landscapes.
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subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biological and medical sciences
CANOPY
COUVERT
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
Density
Ecological modeling
Ecology
Ecotones
Environmental aspects
Forest ecology
Fractals
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects. Techniques
GRASSLANDS
HERBAGE
Juniper
JUNIPERUS
JUNIPERUS MONOSPERMA
Landscape ecology
Landscapes
NEW MEXICO
NOUVEAU MEXIQUE
NUEVO MEXICO
PINUS EDULIS
Pinyon pines
PLANT POPULATION
Plant spacing
POBLACION VEGETAL
POPULATION VEGETALE
PRADERAS
SPATIAL VARIATION
Teledetection and vegetation maps
Trees
Woodlands
title Detection of critical densities associated with pinon-juniper woodland ecotones
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