Self-organized regular vegetation patterns are widespread1 and thought to mediate ecosystem functions such as productivity and robustness, but the mechanisms underlying their origin and maintenance remain disputed. Particularly controversial are landscapes of overdispersed (evenly spaced) elements, such as North American Mima mounds, Brazilian murundus, South African heuweltjies, and, famously, Namibian fairy circles. Two competing hypotheses are currently debated. On the one hand, models of scale-dependent feedbacks, whereby plants facilitate neighbours while competing with distant individuals, can reproduce various regular patterns identified in satellite imagery. Owing to deep theoretical roots and apparent generality, scale-dependent fe...
Spatial patterning is a key natural history attribute of sessile organisms that frequently emerges f...
Millions of generally regularly spaced, roughly circular barren patches called fairy circles occur i...
Recent work has suggested that emergent ecological network structure exhibits very little spatial or...
Self-organized regular vegetation patterns are widespread and thought to mediate ecosystem functions...
Numerical analysis of spatial pattern is widely used in ecology to describe the characteristics of f...
Self-organized spatial vegetation patterning is widespread and has been described using models of sc...
Explaining large-scale ordered patterns and their effects on ecosystem functioning is a fundamental ...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in water-limited regions and have been su...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in water-limited regions and have been su...
Vegetation patterns are abundant in arid and semiarid ecosystems, but how they form remains unclear....
Self-organized spatial patterns are increasingly recognized for their contribution to ecosystem func...
Patches of vegetation consist of dense clusters of shrubs, grass, or trees, often found to be circul...
The finding that regular spatial patterns can emerge in nature from local interactions between organ...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in drylands and, because pattern shape co...
The finding that regular spatial patterns can emerge in nature from local interactions between organ...
Spatial patterning is a key natural history attribute of sessile organisms that frequently emerges f...
Millions of generally regularly spaced, roughly circular barren patches called fairy circles occur i...
Recent work has suggested that emergent ecological network structure exhibits very little spatial or...
Self-organized regular vegetation patterns are widespread and thought to mediate ecosystem functions...
Numerical analysis of spatial pattern is widely used in ecology to describe the characteristics of f...
Self-organized spatial vegetation patterning is widespread and has been described using models of sc...
Explaining large-scale ordered patterns and their effects on ecosystem functioning is a fundamental ...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in water-limited regions and have been su...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in water-limited regions and have been su...
Vegetation patterns are abundant in arid and semiarid ecosystems, but how they form remains unclear....
Self-organized spatial patterns are increasingly recognized for their contribution to ecosystem func...
Patches of vegetation consist of dense clusters of shrubs, grass, or trees, often found to be circul...
The finding that regular spatial patterns can emerge in nature from local interactions between organ...
Self-organized spatial patterns of vegetation are frequent in drylands and, because pattern shape co...
The finding that regular spatial patterns can emerge in nature from local interactions between organ...
Spatial patterning is a key natural history attribute of sessile organisms that frequently emerges f...
Millions of generally regularly spaced, roughly circular barren patches called fairy circles occur i...
Recent work has suggested that emergent ecological network structure exhibits very little spatial or...