Abstract

Screening is a strategy for detecting undesirable change prior to manifestation of symptoms or adverse effects. Although the well-recognized utility of screening makes it commonplace in medicine, it has yet to be implemented in ecosystem management. Ecosystem management is in an era of diagnosis and treatment of undesirable change, and as a result, remains more reactive than proactive and unable to effectively deal with today’s plethora of non-stationary conditions. In this paper, we introduce spatial imaging-based screening to ecology. We link advancements in spatial resilience theory, data, and technological and computational capabilities and power to detect regime shifts (i.e., vegetation state transitions) that are known to be detrimental to human well-being and ecosystem service delivery. With a state-of-the-art landcover dataset and freely-available, cloud-based, geospatial computing platform, we screen for spatial signals of the three most iconic vegetation transitions studied in western USA rangelands: (1) erosion and desertification; (2) woody encroachment; and (3) annual exotic grass invasion. For a series of locations that differ in ecological complexity and geographic extent, we answer the following questions: (1) Which regime shift is expected or of greatest concern? (2) Can we detect a transition signal associated with the expected regime shift? (3) If detected, is the transition signal transient or persistent over time? (4) If detected and persistent, is the transition signal stationary or non-stationary over time? (5) What other signals do we detect? Our approach reveals a powerful and flexible methodology, whereby professionals can use spatial imaging to verify the occurrence of alternative vegetation regimes, image the spatial boundaries separating regimes, track the magnitude and direction of regime shift signals, differentiate persistent and stationary transition signals that warrant continued screening from the more concerning persistent and non-stationary transition signals, and then leverage disciplinary strength and resources for more targeted diagnostic testing (e.g., inventory and monitoring) and treatment (e.g., management) of regime shifts. While the rapid screening approach used here can continue to be implemented and refined for rangelands, it has broader implications and can be adapted to other ecological systems to revolutionize the information space needed to better manage critical transitions in nature.

Highlights

  • Screening is widely applied to the early detection of undesirable change

  • From 2007 to 2017, the blowout’s spatial transition signal was present and persistent, but it failed to exhibit non-stationary by spreading into surrounding areas— before, during, or after the wildfire—in a manner that led to the expansion of the blowout and displacement of perennial grassland

  • This paper explores the potential to image and screen for rangeland vegetation transitions

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Summary

Introduction

Screening is widely applied to the early detection of undesirable change. Pioneering approaches to screening in medicine made it possible to detect diseases before consequences to health were realized by the individual or confirmed through practitioner diagnosis (Morabia and Zhang, 2004). Despite its clear utility in medicine, screening for undesirable ecological change (i.e., regime shifts; state transitions) has yet to be implemented in ecosystem management. Many early warning indicators of ecological regime shifts require extensive data and a priori understanding of focal systems and/or the disturbances they experience (Gsell et al, 2016). This means that such applications may be incapable of objectively representing the risk of undesirable regime shifts prior to the manifestation of their symptoms, which limits preventative management efforts and leaves professionals reliant upon reactive strategies that lag behind transition signals

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