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The effects of dune stabilization on the spatiotemporal distribution of soil moisture resources, Northern Great Plains, Canada

Authors :
Hugenholtz, Chris H.
Letts, Matthew G.
Koenig, Daniel Edgar
Hugenholtz, Chris H.
Letts, Matthew G.
Koenig, Daniel Edgar
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

In dryland environments, the availability of soil moisture is the primary control on plant species’ distributions. In the sandhill regions of the northern Great Plains, vegetation establishment has transformed highly mobile, desert-like dune fields into stabilized landscapes covered by mixed-grassland prairie. This study examines how dune stabilization has modified the spatiotemporal distribution of soil moisture resources. An ergodic (space-for-time) approach was used, comparing soil moisture dynamics on active and vegetation-stabilized dunes in the Bigstick Sand Hills of southwestern Saskatchewan. Results indicate that while dune stabilization has enhanced near-surface soil moisture availability, deeper profile soil moisture recharge is reduced. Through better understanding how vegetation has modified soil moisture dynamics in stabilizing sandhill regions, better management practices may be implemented to maintain water resource availability and ecosystem health.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
en_CA
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375491305
Document Type :
Electronic Resource