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Moving mountains: grazing agents drive terracette formation on steep hillslopes

Moving mountains: grazing agents drive terracette formation on steep hillslopes

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

Terracettes, striking, step-like landforms that stripe steep, vegetated hillslopes, have puzzled scientists for more than a century. Competing hypotheses invoke either slow mass-wasting or the relentless trampling of grazing animals, yet no mechanistic model has linked hoof-scale behavior to landscape-scale form. Here we bridge that gap with an active-walker model in which ungulates are represented as stochastic foragers moving on an erodible slope. Each agent weighs the energetic cost of climbing against the benefit of fresh forage; every hoof-fall compacts soil and lowers local biomass, subtly reshaping the energy landscape that guides subsequent steps. Over time, these stigmergic feedbacks concentrate traffic along cross-slope paths that coalesce into periodic tread-and-riser bands, morphologically analogous to natural terracettes. Our model illustrates how local foraging rules governing movement and substrate feedback can self-organize into large-scale topographic patterns, highlighting the wider role of decentralized biological processes in sculpting terrestrial landscapes.

Benjamin Seleb、Atanu Chatterjee、Saad Bhamla

自然地理学地质学

Benjamin Seleb,Atanu Chatterjee,Saad Bhamla.Moving mountains: grazing agents drive terracette formation on steep hillslopes[EB/OL].(2025-04-23)[2025-07-16].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.17496.点此复制

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