| Literature DB >> 31606764 |
Sofya Zaytseva1,2, Junping Shi3, Leah B Shaw3.
Abstract
Smooth cordgrass Spartina alterniflora is a grass species commonly found in tidal marshes. It is an ecosystem engineer, capable of modifying the structure of its surrounding environment through various feedbacks. The scale-dependent feedback between marsh grass and sediment volume is particularly of interest. Locally, the marsh vegetation attenuates hydrodynamic energy, enhancing sediment accretion and promoting further vegetation growth. In turn, the diverted water flow promotes the formation of erosion troughs over longer distances. This scale-dependent feedback may explain the characteristic spatially varying marsh shoreline, commonly observed in nature. We propose a mathematical framework to model grass-sediment dynamics as a system of reaction-diffusion equations with an additional nonlocal term quantifying the short-range positive and long-range negative grass-sediment interactions. We use a Mexican-hat kernel function to model this scale-dependent feedback. We perform a steady state biharmonic approximation of our system and derive conditions for the emergence of spatial patterns, corresponding to a spatially varying marsh shoreline. We find that the emergence of such patterns depends on the spatial scale and strength of the scale-dependent feedback, specified by the width and amplitude of the Mexican-hat kernel function.Entities:
Keywords: Cooperation; Marsh ecosystem; Nonlocal interactions; Pattern formation; Reaction–diffusion; Steady state
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31606764 DOI: 10.1007/s00285-019-01437-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Math Biol ISSN: 0303-6812 Impact factor: 2.259