17 January 2023

Postulated explanation for Namibian "fairy circles"


They are not the same as the fungal "fairy rings."
Satellite imagery shows there could be millions of these “fairy circles” in the area, but scientists have debated what could explain the existence of even one, which can span up to 20 meters in diameter. Perhaps termites are chomping at the plant roots? Maybe the grasses are somehow creating the patterns? Or a toxin has decimated the soil?...

There must be very strongly ordering forces behind the creation of these pattern because otherwise it would be much more noisy, much less order,” said Stephan Getzin, who is a desert ecologist at the University of Göttingen and has published numerous papers on these circles. “That’s the fascination about the fairy circles.”

Now, Getzin and his colleagues have acquired new compelling evidence to explain the mysterious circles in the region. They point to a fierce competition among plants for water on the arid terrain. Researchers say periodic vegetation patterns like fairy circles could also increasingly pop up around the world under a warming climate. Simply put, plants may be battling one another to survive the dry conditions, stealing water away from their neighbors, which leaves a bare circle.
That explanation is debated, as per the discussion at the link.

6 comments:

  1. "as per the discussion at the link." - and that link might be?

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    1. The one I boldfaced rather than highlighting with the link. Fixed now.

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  2. Here ya go: https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/01/13/fairy-circles-namibia-australia-desert-mystery/ Scientists inch closer to learning origins of mysterious ‘fairy circles’

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  3. and for the more science / research oriented readers: https://www.uni-goettingen.de/en/3240.html?id=6841 Press release: Secrets of Namibia’s fairy circles demystified: plants self-organise

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  4. This may be one location https://goo.gl/maps/koi5ci8JdCkGdxmy5 if you zoom in, you can see raggedy circles.

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