When a pattern of spatial or temporal environmental variation changes, it takes time for populations to reach their new stationary
distributions, and during this time, the competitive landscape is also in flux. As a first step toward understanding community
responses to altered variational regimes, I investigate the convergence of an annual–perennial plant system to its stationary
spatiotemporal distribution following a change in environmental variation. I find that, to good approximation, convergence
is the sum of two separate processes: global convergence, which governs changes in the total population, and local convergence,
which governs population redistribution. While the slower process (global or local) eventually governs convergence, the faster
process may initially dominate if it starts further from its stationary distribution, so that the populations converge quickly
at first, then slow down. That is, when disturbances are spatially heterogeneous, a system may be initially more resilient
under some initial conditions than others.
Keywords Transient dynamics - Resilience - Spatiotemporal - Altered disturbance regime - Annual - Perennial
This article is intended as a Letter.