Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.

Wetland restoration can be measured over time using community vegetation as an effectiveness indicator of restoration actions. Spencer Island Regional Park is part of the tidal freshwater wetlands along the Snohomish river basin. Those wetlands are part of a complex ecosystems, in which they are inc...

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Main Author: Lizana Carolina A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Landscape Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0017
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spelling doaj-3c95d1c0fc0a43558ee51373ecc9e7982021-09-06T19:41:38ZengSciendoJournal of Landscape Ecology1805-41962019-12-01123708010.2478/jlecol-2019-0017jlecol-2019-0017Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.Lizana Carolina A.0College of the Environment, University of Washington, Seattle, U.S.Wetland restoration can be measured over time using community vegetation as an effectiveness indicator of restoration actions. Spencer Island Regional Park is part of the tidal freshwater wetlands along the Snohomish river basin. Those wetlands are part of a complex ecosystems, in which they are included as a salmon corridor. This research analyzes the vegetation community changes over time after restored in 1996 on Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, Washington State, U.S. I analyzed three spectral indices using segmentation and supervised classification of land cover from 1997 to 2018. I found that in the last 21 years, the areas with emergent palustrine vegetation and forests increased, in contrast to diminishing areas of upland and scrub-shrub classes. Those finds can be interpreted that the community vegetation advanced to higher wetland successional stages as upland areas have been colonized by emergent wetland plant communities. A linear regression model predicted that by 2025, the difference between emergent and upland classes should increase. Empirical evidence is presented that support the integration of spectral indices to identify changes in community vegetation. However, it is recommended for future studies to include spectral indices and spatial information for soil and hydrology to deepen these results.https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0017spatial analysislandscape ecologyvegetation cover
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lizana Carolina A.
spellingShingle Lizana Carolina A.
Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
Journal of Landscape Ecology
spatial analysis
landscape ecology
vegetation cover
author_facet Lizana Carolina A.
author_sort Lizana Carolina A.
title Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
title_short Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
title_full Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
title_fullStr Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
title_full_unstemmed Use of Spectral Indices to Identify the Changes in the Vegetation Community Over Time After Restoring a Palustrine Wetland: A Case Study of Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, WA.
title_sort use of spectral indices to identify the changes in the vegetation community over time after restoring a palustrine wetland: a case study of spencer island regional park, everett, wa.
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Landscape Ecology
issn 1805-4196
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Wetland restoration can be measured over time using community vegetation as an effectiveness indicator of restoration actions. Spencer Island Regional Park is part of the tidal freshwater wetlands along the Snohomish river basin. Those wetlands are part of a complex ecosystems, in which they are included as a salmon corridor. This research analyzes the vegetation community changes over time after restored in 1996 on Spencer Island Regional Park, Everett, Washington State, U.S. I analyzed three spectral indices using segmentation and supervised classification of land cover from 1997 to 2018. I found that in the last 21 years, the areas with emergent palustrine vegetation and forests increased, in contrast to diminishing areas of upland and scrub-shrub classes. Those finds can be interpreted that the community vegetation advanced to higher wetland successional stages as upland areas have been colonized by emergent wetland plant communities. A linear regression model predicted that by 2025, the difference between emergent and upland classes should increase. Empirical evidence is presented that support the integration of spectral indices to identify changes in community vegetation. However, it is recommended for future studies to include spectral indices and spatial information for soil and hydrology to deepen these results.
topic spatial analysis
landscape ecology
vegetation cover
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jlecol-2019-0017
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