%0 Journal Article %T A multiİ\scale study of Australian fairy circles using soil excavations and droneİ\based image analysis %A Hezi Yizhaq %A Kerstin Wieg %A Miriam Mu£żozİ\Rojas %A Stephan Getzin %A Todd E. Erickson %J Ecosphere - Wiley Online Library %D 2019 %R https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2620 %X Fairy circles (FCs) are extremely ordered round patches of bare soil within arid grasslands of southwestern Africa and northwestern Australia. Their origin is disputed because biotic factors such as insects or abiotic factors such as edaphic and ecoİ\hydrological feedback mechanisms have been suggested to be causal. In this research, we used a multiİ\scale approach to shed light on the origin of Australian FCs. At a local scale, we investigated the potential cause of FCs using analyses of soil compaction and texture within FCs, the surrounding matrix vegetation, and in nearby large bareİ\soil areas. We found that soil hardness and clay content were similarly higher inside the FCs and in the large bareİ\soil areas. When compared to the matrix soils with protective grass cover, the 2.6¨C2.8 times higher clay content in FCs and large bareİ\soil areas is likely sourced via multiple abiotic weathering processes. Intense rainfall events, particle dispersion, surface heat, evaporation, and mechanical crust building inhibit plant growth in both areas. At the landscape scale, a systematic survey of 154 soil excavations within FCs was undertaken to evaluate the presence of pavement termitaria that could inhibit plant growth. We show that in up to 100% and most of the excavations per plot, no hard pavement termitaria were present in the FCs. This fact is substantiated by the observation that small, newly forming FCs are initiated on soft sand without evidence of termite activity. At the regional scale, we investigated the spatial properties of FCs and common termiteİ\created gaps in Western Australia, using spatially explicit statistics. We mapped three 25İ\ha FC plots with a drone and compared them with three aerial images of typical vegetation gaps created by harvester and spinifex termites. We demonstrate that the small diameters, the lower ordering, and the heterogeneous patterns of these common termite gaps strongly differ from the unique spatial signature of FCs. Our multiİ\scale approach emphasizes that FCs are not trivial termite gaps and that partial correlation with termites at some sites does not imply causation. Instead, we highlight the need to study the edaphic and ecoİ\hydrological drivers of vegetationİ\pattern formation in waterİ\limited environments. The landscape scale vegetation patterns of the soİ\called fairy circles (FCs) are characterized by extremely ordered grassland gaps that look like polka dots from a bird's eye view. In northwest Western Australia, the typical diameters of the circles are about 4 m, and in Namibia, the diameters increase with %U https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ecs2.2620