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Coevolution of nonlinear trends in vegetation, soils, and topography with elevation and slope aspect: A case study in the sky islands of southern Arizona
Author(s) -
Pelletier Jon D.,
BarronGafford Greg A.,
Breshears David D.,
Brooks Paul D.,
Chorover Jon,
Durcik Matej,
Harman Ciaran J.,
Huxman Travis E.,
Lohse Kathleen A.,
Lybrand Rebecca,
Meixner Tom,
McIntosh Jennifer C.,
Papuga Shirley A.,
Rasmussen Craig,
Schaap Marcel,
Swetnam Tyson L.,
Troch Peter A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9011
pISSN - 2169-9003
DOI - 10.1002/jgrf.20046
Subject(s) - pedogenesis , bedrock , geology , elevation (ballistics) , soil water , vegetation (pathology) , weathering , biogeochemical cycle , precipitation , physical geography , drainage , hydrology (agriculture) , earth science , geomorphology , soil science , ecology , medicine , geometry , mathematics , geotechnical engineering , pathology , biology , meteorology , geography , physics
Feedbacks among vegetation dynamics, pedogenesis, and topographic development affect the “critical zone”—the living filter for Earth's hydrologic, biogeochemical, and rock/sediment cycles. Assessing the importance of such feedbacks, which may be particularly pronounced in water‐limited systems, remains a fundamental interdisciplinary challenge. The sky islands of southern Arizona offer an unusually well‐defined natural experiment involving such feedbacks because mean annual precipitation varies by a factor of five over distances of approximately 10 km in areas of similar rock type (granite) and tectonic history. Here we compile high‐resolution, spatially distributed data for Effective Energy and Mass Transfer (EEMT: the energy available to drive bedrock weathering), above‐ground biomass, soil thickness, hillslope‐scale topographic relief, and drainage density in two such mountain ranges (Santa Catalina: SCM; Pinaleño: PM). Strong correlations exist among vegetation‐soil‐topography variables, which vary nonlinearly with elevation, such that warm, dry, low‐elevation portions of these ranges are characterized by relatively low above‐ground biomass, thin soils, minimal soil organic matter, steep slopes, and high drainage densities; conversely, cooler, wetter, higher elevations have systematically higher biomass, thicker organic‐rich soils, gentler slopes, and lower drainage densities. To test if eco‐pedo‐geomorphic feedbacks drive this pattern, we developed a landscape evolution model that couples pedogenesis and topographic development over geologic time scales, with rates explicitly dependent on vegetation density. The model self‐organizes into states similar to those observed in SCM and PM. Our results highlight the potential importance of eco‐pedo‐geomorphic feedbacks, mediated by soil thickness, in water‐limited systems.