Legacy effects in linked ecological- soil-geomorphic systems of drylands

Author

Monger, Curtis

Sala, Oswaldo E.

Duniway, M.

Goldfus, H.

Meir, I.

Poch, Rosa M.

Throop, H.L.

Vivoni, E.R.

Publication date

2015-03-18T18:56:50Z

2015-03-18T18:56:50Z

2015-02-08

2015-03-18T18:56:50Z



Abstract

A legacy effect refers to the impacts that previous conditions have on current processes or properties. Legacies have been recognized by many disciplines, from physiology and ecology to anthropology and geology. Within the context of climatic change, ecological legacies in drylands (eg vegetative patterns) result from feedbacks between biotic, soil, and geomorphic processes that operate at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Legacy effects depend on (1) the magnitude of the original phenomenon, (2) the time since the occurrence of the phenomenon, and (3) the sensitivity of the ecological<br>soil<br>geomorphic system to change. Here we present a conceptual framework for legacy effects at short-term (days to months), medium-term (years to decades), and long-term (centuries to millennia) timescales, which reveals the ubiquity of such effects in drylands across research disciplines.

Document Type

Article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Ecologia de les regions àrides; Arid regions ecology

Publisher

Ecological Society of America

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1890/140269

Frontiers In Ecology And The Environment, 2015, vol. 13, núm. 1, p. 13-19

Rights

(c) Ecological Society of America, 2015

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