Southwest Biological Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Arizona.
Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Boise, Idaho.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Oct;24(10):4972-4982. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14374. Epub 2018 Jul 20.
Restoration and rehabilitation of native vegetation in dryland ecosystems, which encompass over 40% of terrestrial ecosystems, is a common challenge that continues to grow as wildfire and biological invasions transform dryland plant communities. The difficulty in part stems from low and variable precipitation, combined with limited understanding about how weather conditions influence restoration outcomes, and increasing recognition that one-time seeding approaches can fail if they do not occur during appropriate plant establishment conditions. The sagebrush biome, which once covered over 620,000 km of western North America, is a prime example of a pressing dryland restoration challenge for which restoration success has been variable. We analyzed field data on Artemisia tridentata (big sagebrush) restoration collected at 771 plots in 177 wildfire sites across its western range, and used process-based ecohydrological modeling to identify factors leading to its establishment. Our results indicate big sagebrush occurrence is most strongly associated with relatively cool temperatures and wet soils in the first spring after seeding. In particular, the amount of winter snowpack, but not total precipitation, helped explain the availability of spring soil moisture and restoration success. We also find considerable interannual variability in the probability of sagebrush establishment. Adaptive management strategies that target seeding during cool, wet years or mitigate effects of variability through repeated seeding may improve the likelihood of successful restoration in dryland ecosystems. Given consistent projections of increasing temperatures, declining snowpack, and increasing weather variability throughout midlatitude drylands, weather-centric adaptive management approaches to restoration will be increasingly important for dryland restoration success.
恢复和重建旱地生态系统中的本地植被是一个普遍的挑战,旱地生态系统覆盖了超过 40%的陆地生态系统,由于野火和生物入侵改变了旱地植物群落,这个挑战还在不断加剧。部分原因是降水低且不稳定,再加上对天气条件如何影响恢复结果的了解有限,以及越来越认识到如果不在适当的植物建立条件下进行一次性播种,这些方法可能会失败。曾经覆盖了北美洲西部超过 62 万平方千米的山艾灌丛生物群落,就是一个迫切需要解决的旱地恢复挑战的主要例子,在这个例子中,恢复的成功与否存在很大的变数。我们分析了在其西部范围内 177 个野火地点的 771 个样地收集的 Artemisia tridentata(三齿蒿)恢复的实地数据,并使用基于过程的生态水文学模型来确定导致其建立的因素。我们的结果表明,三齿蒿的出现与播种后第一个春季相对凉爽的温度和湿润的土壤密切相关。特别是,冬季积雪量而不是总降水量有助于解释春季土壤水分的可用性和恢复的成功。我们还发现三齿蒿建立的概率存在相当大的年际变化。在凉爽、湿润的年份进行播种的适应性管理策略,或通过重复播种来减轻变异性的影响,可能会提高旱地生态系统恢复成功的可能性。鉴于中纬度旱地的温度持续上升、积雪量持续减少和天气变异性持续增加的一致预测,以天气为中心的恢复适应性管理方法将对旱地恢复的成功变得越来越重要。