Landsliding and Its Multiscale Influence on Mountainscapes

Landsliding is a complex process that modifies mountainscapes worldwide. Its severe and sometimes long-lasting negative effects contrast with the less-documented positive effects on ecosystems, raising numerous questions about the dual role of landsliding, the feedbacks between biotic and geomorphic...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:BioScience. - Oxford University Press. - 59(2009), 8, Seite 685-698
1. Verfasser: Restrepo, Carla (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Walker, Lawrence R., Shiels, Aaron B., Bussmann, Rainer, Claessens, Lieven, Fisch, Simey, Lozano, Pablo, Negi, Girish, Paolini, Leonardo, Poveda, Germán, Ramos-Scharrón, Carlos, Richter, Michael, Velázquez, Eduardo
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Veröffentlicht: 2009
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:BioScience
Schlagworte:landslides biotic and geomorphic processes mountains conservation Physical sciences Biological sciences Health sciences
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Landsliding is a complex process that modifies mountainscapes worldwide. Its severe and sometimes long-lasting negative effects contrast with the less-documented positive effects on ecosystems, raising numerous questions about the dual role of landsliding, the feedbacks between biotic and geomorphic processes, and, ultimately, the ecological and evolutionary responses of organisms. We present a conceptual model in which feedbacks between biotic and geomorphic processes, landslides, and ecosystem attributes are hypothesized to drive the dynamics of mountain ecosystems at multiple scales. This model is used to integrate and synthesize a rich, but fragmented, body of literature generated in different disciplines, and to highlight the need for profitable collaborations between biologists and geoscientists. Such efforts should help identify attributes that contribute to the resilience of mountain ecosystems, and also should help in conservation, restoration, and hazard assessment. Given the sensitivity of mountains to land-use and global climate change, these endeavors are both relevant and timely.
ISSN:15253244
DOI:10.1525/bio.2009.59.8.10