“…Their improved soil properties combined with the direct effect of plant roots and stems make water infiltration and storage better than in open spaces (Thompson, Harman, Troch, Brooks, & Sivapalan, ). This hydrological dichotomy between open and vegetated patches controls the location of vegetation within the landscape and leads to a two‐phase system in which, during effective rainfall events, runoff is mainly generated on very often crusted open areas (sources) and redistributed towards vegetation patches (sinks) where it infiltrates (Assouline et al, ; Chen, Sela, Svoray, & Assouline, ; Ludwig et al, ; Mayor, Bautista, Small, Dixon, & Bellot, ; Puigdefabregas, Sole, Gutierrez, Del Barrio, & Boer, ; Rodríguez‐Caballero, Cantón, Lazaro, & Solé‐Benet, ; Thompson et al, ). Source‐sink interaction maximizes resource availability for plants and is critical for system functioning on a larger scale, reducing water, sediment and nutrient losses from runoff (Chen et al, ; Chen, Sela, Svoray, & Assouline, ; Magliano, Breshears, Fernandez, & Jobbagy, ) and increasing productivity (Ludwig et al, ).…”