Critical transitions in Chinese dunes during the past 12,000 years

Like other complex systems, sand dunes alternate between stable states, which have coexisted for 12,000 years in northern China. Dune systems can have alternative stable states that coexist under certain environmental conditions: a vegetated, stabilized state and a bare active state. This behavior i...

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Published inScience advances Vol. 6; no. 9; p. eaay8020
Main Authors Xu, Zhiwei, Mason, Joseph A., Xu, Chi, Yi, Shuangwen, Bathiany, Sebastian, Yizhaq, Hezi, Zhou, Yali, Cheng, Jun, Holmgren, Milena, Lu, Huayu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Association for the Advancement of Science 01.02.2020
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ISSN2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI10.1126/sciadv.aay8020

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Summary:Like other complex systems, sand dunes alternate between stable states, which have coexisted for 12,000 years in northern China. Dune systems can have alternative stable states that coexist under certain environmental conditions: a vegetated, stabilized state and a bare active state. This behavior implies the possibility of abrupt transitions from one state to another in response to gradual environmental change. Here, we synthesize stratigraphic records covering 12,000 years of dynamics of this system at 144 localities across three dune fields in northern China. We find side-by-side coexistence of active and stabilized states, and occasional sharp shifts in time between those contrasting states. Those shifts occur asynchronously despite the fact that the entire landscape has been subject to the same gradual changes in monsoon rainfall and other conditions. At larger scale, the spatial heterogeneity in dune dynamics averages out to produce relatively smooth change. However, our results do show different paths of recovery and collapse of vegetation at system-wide scales, implying that hysteretic behavior occurs in spatially extended systems.
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ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aay8020