TITLE: Definitions of drylands
DATE: 2024-03-15
AUTHOR: John L. Godlee
====================================================================


I've read a few papers that refer to "drylands" and "semi-arid" 
ecosystems, and I became interested in the definitions of these 
terms, so here I've gathered together some notes on my reading, 
with the aim of tracing back the definitions through the literature.

Ahlstrom et al. (2015) is a DGVM modelling study that looks at the 
contribution of different regional terrestrial ecosystem types to 
the temporal trend and temporal variability of the global land 
carbon sink. They find that "semi-arid" ecosystems dominate the 
trend and inter-annual variability of the sink, with these temporal 
variations being strongly associated with inter-annual variation in 
precipitation. They define semi-arid ecosystems alongside five 
other land cover classes: tropical forest, extra-tropical forest, 
tundra and arctic shrubland, grassland and agriculture, and barren 
(sparsely vegetated). First they divide into forest, savanna and 
shrublands, and grasslands and croplands using the MODIS land cover 
classification (MCD12C1 type 3). They then divide the savanna and 
shrubland class into two based on latitude. Below 45N they class as 
semi-arid, and above 45N they class as tundra and arctic shrubland. 
Below is their map of land cover classes. Tropical forests in light 
green, extra-tropical forests in dark green, semi-arid in orange, 
tundra and arctic shrubland in grey, grassland and cops in blue, 
barren in white.

  ![Map of land cover classes as defined by Ahlstom et al. 
(2015).](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/drylands/ahlstrom_map.png)

MacBean et al. (2021) can be seen in a way as a follow up to 
Ahlstrom et al. (2015). They use the same DGVM model ensemble 
(TRENDY v7) to evaluate the suitability of these models in 
modelling carbon dynamics in semi-arid systems. They find that all 
models under-estimate both the mean annual C uptake/release, as 
well as the magnitude of NEE IAV, and that the sensitivity and 
timing of ecosystem C uptake to plant available moisture was the 
issue, where models under-estimated the response of GPP to water 
availability during the wet season. MacBean et al. assert that 
drylands "cover more than 40% of the world surface". For this 
statistic they cite Schimel (2010).

Schimel (2010) actually says that drylands cover about 45% of the 
Earth's land surface, but they don't cite this statistic or show 
their working. Schimel (2010) is itself a cover piece for Rotenberg 
and Yakir (2010), which appears in the same issue of Science, so I 
guess they are implicitly referencing that article.

Rotenberg and Yakir (2010) quote that semi-arid regions cover 2.4 
billion ha, ~17.7% of total land surface area, and for this 
statistic they cite (Lal 2004). Rotenberg and Yakir (2010) is a 
study of one particular semi-arid pine forest in southern Israel 
called Yatir, whee there is a flux tower. They measured fluxes of 
CO2, water vapour and photosynthetic activity.

Lal (2004) defines drylands as regions in which the ratio of total 
annual precipitation (P) to potential evapotranspiration (PET) 
(Aridity Index, P:PET), ranges from 0.05 to 0.65. They say these 
regions cover 6.15 billion ha, 47.2% of earth's land area. Lal 
(2004) is sort of a review article on the importance of dryland 
ecosystems in the carbon cycle.

The aridity index values and classifications quoted in Lal (2004) 
come from UNEP (Middleton and Thomas 1997), the World Atlas of 
Desertification, 2nd edition, specifically pages 5-7. In this they 
define multiple aridity zones bounded by the Aridity Index P:PET:

-   Humid >0.65
-   Dry sub-humid 0.5-0.65
-   Semi-arid 0.2-0.5
-   Arid 0.05-0.2
-   Hyper-arid <0.05

In this chapter, Middleton and Thomas say that their classification 
comes fom an earlier iteration used in the UNSECO (1977) map of 
aridity. The boundaries between arid and hyper-arid zones, and dry 
sub-humid and humid zones were changed for the 1997 map, after they 
found that PET was being under- and over-estimated in very dry and 
moist climates, respectively. They also introduced a separate cold 
and mountains zone, acknowledging that while these areas may be 
arid, they present a different range of environmental issues than 
warm dryland environments.

Heathcote (1983), in The Arid Lands: Their Use and Abuse, observes 
that the UNSECO (1977) map is very similar to the map of Meigs 
(1953), which was also prepared for UNESCO for their extended 
project on drylands, which ran between 1951 and 1964. The maps in 
Meigs (1953) use a different aridity index to UNESCO (1977). Meigs 
uses the Thornthwaite (1948) climate classification, which uses an 
aridity index of 100(d/n), where d is the sum of monthly 
differences between P and PET for those months when the average 
precipitation is less than the average evapotranspiration, and n is 
the sum of monthly values of PET for the deficient months. Grove et 
al. (1977) shows that Meigs' definition of extremely arid lands 
aligns well with areas receiving less than 25 mm annual rainfall or 
at least 12 consecutive months without rainfall, arid as 25-200 mm, 
semi-arid as 200-500 mm.

  ![World map showing Meigs' classification of arid 
lands.](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/drylands/meigs.png)

The Köppen-Geiger climate classification (Köppen 1884, Peel et 
al. 2007) uses a mixture of temperature and precipitation 
thresholds to define arid areas, as well as tropical, temperate, 
cold and polar, with subgroups. Ahlstrom et al. (2015) reference 
the Köppen-Geiger classification in their classification of 
tropical and extra-tropical forests, but they don't use it to 
classify semi-arid regions. In the Köppen-Geiger classification, 
arid areas are defined as areas where mean annual precipitation 
(MAP) is less than 10x a key precipitation threshold. The 
precipitation threshold is 2x mean annual temperature (MAT) if 70% 
or more of MAP occurs in the cooler six months of the year, 
2xMAT+28 if 70% or more of MAP occurs in the warmer six months of 
the year, or otherwise 2xMAT+14.

  ![The Köppen-Geiger classification for Africa, from Peel et al. 
2007.](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/drylands/koppen_africa.png)

The FAO defines arid zones as those areas where the length of the 
growing period is less than 180 days (FAO 2000); this includes 
regions classified climatically as arid, semi-arid and dry 
sub-humid (from Gaur 2018).

The Holdridge life zones (Holdrige 1947, 1967), determine semi-arid 
regions as having an aridity index P:PET value less than 
approximately 0.5.

  ![Holdridge Life 
Zones.](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/drylands/holdridge.png)

Other definitions in the literature

Here I am compiling a list opportunistically of other definitions 
of drylands and semi-arid ecosystems, as I encounter them in the 
literature.

Kindt (2023) - "Dryland locations were defined by a 
CMI < -0.35", where CMI is the Climatic Moisture Index, aka the 
aridity index P:PET as used by Middleton and Thomas (1997).

  [Kindt (2023)]: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16914

Wang et al. (2022) - "Drylands are commonly defined as regions 
where precipitation is substantially smaller than atmospheric water 
demand (as quantified by potential evapotranspiration, PET). They 
are the largest biome on Earth (Schimel 2010), covering about 40% 
of the terrestrial land surface"

  [Wang et al. (2022)]: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-022-01499-y