Landscape composition and land use impact the interactions between soil and vegetation. Differences in micro-behaviour, driven by the interplay of heterogeneous soil and vegetation dynamics, affect emergent characteristics across a landscape. Scaling approaches to understand the drivers of these emergent characteristics have been attempted, but the blueprint of interacting biophysical processes in landscapes is inherently messy and often still unknown. A complicating factor is single disciplinary focus in environmental sciences. Integrated knowledge is vital especially in view of future challenges posed by climate change, population growth, and soil threats. In this paper, we give examples of biophysical interactions that occur across vario...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
Landscapes and the ecological processes they support are inherently complex systems, in that they ha...
Landscape composition and land use impact the interactions between soil and vegetation. Differences ...
Dryland ecosystems are often characterized by patchy vegetation and exposed soil. This structure enh...
Dryland ecosystems are often characterized by patchy vegetation and exposed soil. This structure enh...
[1] Nonlinear interactions between physical and biological factors give rise to the emergence of rem...
Unifying ecosystem ecology and evolutionary biology promises a more complete understanding of the pr...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).In the previous chapter, we saw ...
Soil is the part of the landscape that is less easily observed because it is below the surface. Ther...
Spatial processes often drive ecosystem processes, biogeochemical cycles, and land-atmosphere feedba...
Species distribution and richness ultimately result from complex interactions between biological, ph...
Climate change and land use change often interact, altering biodiversity in unexpected ways. Researc...
Landscape structure and biotic interactions are closely linked. We identify five aspects of landscap...
Land change is the result of multiple human-environment interactions operating across different scal...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
Landscapes and the ecological processes they support are inherently complex systems, in that they ha...
Landscape composition and land use impact the interactions between soil and vegetation. Differences ...
Dryland ecosystems are often characterized by patchy vegetation and exposed soil. This structure enh...
Dryland ecosystems are often characterized by patchy vegetation and exposed soil. This structure enh...
[1] Nonlinear interactions between physical and biological factors give rise to the emergence of rem...
Unifying ecosystem ecology and evolutionary biology promises a more complete understanding of the pr...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).In the previous chapter, we saw ...
Soil is the part of the landscape that is less easily observed because it is below the surface. Ther...
Spatial processes often drive ecosystem processes, biogeochemical cycles, and land-atmosphere feedba...
Species distribution and richness ultimately result from complex interactions between biological, ph...
Climate change and land use change often interact, altering biodiversity in unexpected ways. Researc...
Landscape structure and biotic interactions are closely linked. We identify five aspects of landscap...
Land change is the result of multiple human-environment interactions operating across different scal...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
A growing body of evidence shows that aboveground and belowground communities and processes are intr...
Landscapes and the ecological processes they support are inherently complex systems, in that they ha...