Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China

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Standard

Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China. / Tong, Xiaowei; Wang, Kelin; Brandt, Martin Stefan; Yue, Yuemin; Liao, Chujie; Fensholt, Rasmus.

I: Remote Sensing, Bind 8, Nr. 5, 357, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Tong, X, Wang, K, Brandt, MS, Yue, Y, Liao, C & Fensholt, R 2016, 'Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China', Remote Sensing, bind 8, nr. 5, 357. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs8050357

APA

Tong, X., Wang, K., Brandt, M. S., Yue, Y., Liao, C., & Fensholt, R. (2016). Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China. Remote Sensing, 8(5), [357]. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs8050357

Vancouver

Tong X, Wang K, Brandt MS, Yue Y, Liao C, Fensholt R. Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China. Remote Sensing. 2016;8(5). 357. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs8050357

Author

Tong, Xiaowei ; Wang, Kelin ; Brandt, Martin Stefan ; Yue, Yuemin ; Liao, Chujie ; Fensholt, Rasmus. / Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China. I: Remote Sensing. 2016 ; Bind 8, Nr. 5.

Bibtex

@article{9c8c0c8b2ef04ef19f8061f542a61700,
title = "Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China",
abstract = "To alleviate the severe rocky desertification and improve the ecological conditions in Southwest China, the national and local Chinese governments have implemented a series of Ecological Restoration Projects since the late 1990s. In this context, remote sensing can be a valuable tool for conservation management by monitoring vegetation dynamics, projecting the persistence of vegetation trends and identifying areas of interest for upcoming restoration measures. In this study, we use MODIS satellite time series (2001-2013) and the Hurst exponent to classify the study area (Guizhou and Guangxi Provinces) according to the persistence of future vegetation trends (positive, anti-persistent positive, negative, anti-persistent negative, stable or uncertain). The persistence of trends is interrelated with terrain conditions (elevation and slope angle) and results in an index providing information on the restoration prospects and associated uncertainty of different terrain classes found in the study area. The results show that 69% of the observed trends are persistent beyond 2013, with 57% being stable, 10% positive, 5% anti-persistent positive, 3% negative, 1% anti-persistent negative and 24% uncertain. Most negative development is found in areas of high anthropogenic influence (low elevation and slope), as compared to areas of rough terrain. We further show that the uncertainty increases with the elevation and slope angle, and areas characterized by both high elevation and slope angle need special attention to prevent degradation. Whereas areas with a low elevation and slope angle appear to be less susceptible and relevant for restoration efforts (also having a high uncertainty), we identify large areas of medium elevation and slope where positive future trends are likely to happen if adequate measures are utilized. The proposed framework of this analysis has been proven to work well for assessing restoration prospects in the study area, and due to the generic design, the method is expected to be applicable for other areas of complex landscapes in the world to explore future trends of vegetation.",
keywords = "Future vegetation trends, Growing season NDVI (GSN), Hurst exponent, Persistent trends, Terrain niche index (TNI)",
author = "Xiaowei Tong and Kelin Wang and Brandt, {Martin Stefan} and Yuemin Yue and Chujie Liao and Rasmus Fensholt",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.3390/rs8050357",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Remote Sensing",
issn = "2072-4292",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessing future vegetation trends and restoration prospects in the Karst regions of Southwest China

AU - Tong, Xiaowei

AU - Wang, Kelin

AU - Brandt, Martin Stefan

AU - Yue, Yuemin

AU - Liao, Chujie

AU - Fensholt, Rasmus

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - To alleviate the severe rocky desertification and improve the ecological conditions in Southwest China, the national and local Chinese governments have implemented a series of Ecological Restoration Projects since the late 1990s. In this context, remote sensing can be a valuable tool for conservation management by monitoring vegetation dynamics, projecting the persistence of vegetation trends and identifying areas of interest for upcoming restoration measures. In this study, we use MODIS satellite time series (2001-2013) and the Hurst exponent to classify the study area (Guizhou and Guangxi Provinces) according to the persistence of future vegetation trends (positive, anti-persistent positive, negative, anti-persistent negative, stable or uncertain). The persistence of trends is interrelated with terrain conditions (elevation and slope angle) and results in an index providing information on the restoration prospects and associated uncertainty of different terrain classes found in the study area. The results show that 69% of the observed trends are persistent beyond 2013, with 57% being stable, 10% positive, 5% anti-persistent positive, 3% negative, 1% anti-persistent negative and 24% uncertain. Most negative development is found in areas of high anthropogenic influence (low elevation and slope), as compared to areas of rough terrain. We further show that the uncertainty increases with the elevation and slope angle, and areas characterized by both high elevation and slope angle need special attention to prevent degradation. Whereas areas with a low elevation and slope angle appear to be less susceptible and relevant for restoration efforts (also having a high uncertainty), we identify large areas of medium elevation and slope where positive future trends are likely to happen if adequate measures are utilized. The proposed framework of this analysis has been proven to work well for assessing restoration prospects in the study area, and due to the generic design, the method is expected to be applicable for other areas of complex landscapes in the world to explore future trends of vegetation.

AB - To alleviate the severe rocky desertification and improve the ecological conditions in Southwest China, the national and local Chinese governments have implemented a series of Ecological Restoration Projects since the late 1990s. In this context, remote sensing can be a valuable tool for conservation management by monitoring vegetation dynamics, projecting the persistence of vegetation trends and identifying areas of interest for upcoming restoration measures. In this study, we use MODIS satellite time series (2001-2013) and the Hurst exponent to classify the study area (Guizhou and Guangxi Provinces) according to the persistence of future vegetation trends (positive, anti-persistent positive, negative, anti-persistent negative, stable or uncertain). The persistence of trends is interrelated with terrain conditions (elevation and slope angle) and results in an index providing information on the restoration prospects and associated uncertainty of different terrain classes found in the study area. The results show that 69% of the observed trends are persistent beyond 2013, with 57% being stable, 10% positive, 5% anti-persistent positive, 3% negative, 1% anti-persistent negative and 24% uncertain. Most negative development is found in areas of high anthropogenic influence (low elevation and slope), as compared to areas of rough terrain. We further show that the uncertainty increases with the elevation and slope angle, and areas characterized by both high elevation and slope angle need special attention to prevent degradation. Whereas areas with a low elevation and slope angle appear to be less susceptible and relevant for restoration efforts (also having a high uncertainty), we identify large areas of medium elevation and slope where positive future trends are likely to happen if adequate measures are utilized. The proposed framework of this analysis has been proven to work well for assessing restoration prospects in the study area, and due to the generic design, the method is expected to be applicable for other areas of complex landscapes in the world to explore future trends of vegetation.

KW - Future vegetation trends

KW - Growing season NDVI (GSN)

KW - Hurst exponent

KW - Persistent trends

KW - Terrain niche index (TNI)

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84971473023&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3390/rs8050357

DO - 10.3390/rs8050357

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84971473023

VL - 8

JO - Remote Sensing

JF - Remote Sensing

SN - 2072-4292

IS - 5

M1 - 357

ER -

ID: 165842405