Seven catenas across contracted vegetation patterns, including tiger bush and dotted bush, were studied in the Gourma region in Mali and in northern Burkina Faso (mean annual rainfall 200–550 mm). The tiger bush encompasses an alternate succession of bands oriented nearly perpendicularly to the wind direction NE–SW: sandy grassy microdune, sloped band of bare crusted ground and woody depressive band. A similar succession, without wind orientation, is found for the dotted bush. In this region, tiger bush develops under specific conditions: (1) same orientation but opposite direction of wind and slope, (2) sedimentary and metamorphic rocks (sandstone and schist ironcrust), (3) shallow (<1 m) and impervious soils. Under such circumstances, the dynamics of banded patterns result from alternate and successive action of water and wind erosion. Field evidences showed that vegetation bands migrate upwards with a velocity of 0.2–0.7 m yr −1.