Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA

Monitoring and quantifying changes in vegetation cover over large areas using remote sensing can be achieved using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), an indicator of greenness. However, distinguishing gradual shifts in NDVI (e.g., climate related-changes) versus direct and rapid chan...

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Main Authors: Maliha S. Nash, James Wickham, Jay Christensen, Timothy Wade
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-03-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
USA
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/9/3/295
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spelling doaj-681f3d4a5bc749e4b4d4da76c99d2ac52020-11-25T00:48:40ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922017-03-019329510.3390/rs9030295rs9030295Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USAMaliha S. Nash0James Wickham1Jay Christensen2Timothy Wade3U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Las Vegas, NV 89119, USAU.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USAU.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Las Vegas, NV 89119, USARetiredMonitoring and quantifying changes in vegetation cover over large areas using remote sensing can be achieved using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), an indicator of greenness. However, distinguishing gradual shifts in NDVI (e.g., climate related-changes) versus direct and rapid changes (e.g., fire, land development) is challenging as changes can be confounded by time-dependent patterns, and variation associated with climatic factors. In the present study, we leveraged a method that we previously developed for a pilot study to address these confounding factors by evaluating NDVI change using autoregression techniques that compare results from univariate (NDVI vs. time) and multivariate analyses (NDVI vs. time and climatic factors) for 7,660,636 1 km × 1 km pixels comprising the 48 contiguous states of the USA, over a 25-year period (1989–2013). NDVI changed significantly for 48% of the nation over the 25-year period in the univariate analyses where most significant trends (85%) indicated an increase in greenness over time. By including climatic factors in the multivariate analyses of NDVI over time, the detection of significant NDVI trends increased to 53% (an increase of 5%). Comparisons of univariate and multivariate analyses for each pixel showed that less than 4% of the pixels had a significant NDVI trend attributable to gradual climatic changes while the remainder of pixels with a significant NDVI trend indicated that changes were due to direct factors. While most NDVI changes were attributable to direct factors like wildfires, drought or flooding of agriculture, and tree mortality associated with insect infestation, these conditions may be indirectly influenced by changes in climatic factors.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/9/3/295long-term monitoringNDVI changeUSAdirect factorsclimatic factorsautoregression model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maliha S. Nash
James Wickham
Jay Christensen
Timothy Wade
spellingShingle Maliha S. Nash
James Wickham
Jay Christensen
Timothy Wade
Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
Remote Sensing
long-term monitoring
NDVI change
USA
direct factors
climatic factors
autoregression model
author_facet Maliha S. Nash
James Wickham
Jay Christensen
Timothy Wade
author_sort Maliha S. Nash
title Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
title_short Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
title_full Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
title_fullStr Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Landscape Greenness and Climatic Factors over 25 Years (1989–2013) in the USA
title_sort changes in landscape greenness and climatic factors over 25 years (1989–2013) in the usa
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Monitoring and quantifying changes in vegetation cover over large areas using remote sensing can be achieved using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), an indicator of greenness. However, distinguishing gradual shifts in NDVI (e.g., climate related-changes) versus direct and rapid changes (e.g., fire, land development) is challenging as changes can be confounded by time-dependent patterns, and variation associated with climatic factors. In the present study, we leveraged a method that we previously developed for a pilot study to address these confounding factors by evaluating NDVI change using autoregression techniques that compare results from univariate (NDVI vs. time) and multivariate analyses (NDVI vs. time and climatic factors) for 7,660,636 1 km × 1 km pixels comprising the 48 contiguous states of the USA, over a 25-year period (1989–2013). NDVI changed significantly for 48% of the nation over the 25-year period in the univariate analyses where most significant trends (85%) indicated an increase in greenness over time. By including climatic factors in the multivariate analyses of NDVI over time, the detection of significant NDVI trends increased to 53% (an increase of 5%). Comparisons of univariate and multivariate analyses for each pixel showed that less than 4% of the pixels had a significant NDVI trend attributable to gradual climatic changes while the remainder of pixels with a significant NDVI trend indicated that changes were due to direct factors. While most NDVI changes were attributable to direct factors like wildfires, drought or flooding of agriculture, and tree mortality associated with insect infestation, these conditions may be indirectly influenced by changes in climatic factors.
topic long-term monitoring
NDVI change
USA
direct factors
climatic factors
autoregression model
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/9/3/295
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