Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin

In many parts of Africa, spatially-explicit information on plant α-diversity, i.e., the number of species in a given area, is missing as baseline information for spatial planning. We present an approach on how to combine vegetation-plot databases and remotely-sensed land surface phenology (LSP) metr...

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Main Authors: Rasmus Revermann, Manfred Finckh, Marion Stellmes, Ben J. Strohbach, David Frantz, Jens Oldeland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-04-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
EVI
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/5/370
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spelling doaj-dd8a10f51e43433f96e53501427aa0a52020-11-24T21:06:37ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922016-04-018537010.3390/rs8050370rs8050370Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango BasinRasmus Revermann0Manfred Finckh1Marion Stellmes2Ben J. Strohbach3David Frantz4Jens Oldeland5Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution of Plants, University of Hamburg, Biocentre Klein Flottbek, Ohnhorststr. 18, 22609 Hamburg, GermanyDepartment of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution of Plants, University of Hamburg, Biocentre Klein Flottbek, Ohnhorststr. 18, 22609 Hamburg, GermanyDepartment of Environmental Remote Sensing and Geoinformatics, Faculty of Regional and Environmental Sciences, Trier University, Behringstraße 21, 54296 Trier, GermanySchool of Natural Resources and Spatial Sciences, Namibia University of Science and Technology, P/Bag 13388 Windhoek, NamibiaDepartment of Environmental Remote Sensing and Geoinformatics, Faculty of Regional and Environmental Sciences, Trier University, Behringstraße 21, 54296 Trier, GermanyDepartment of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution of Plants, University of Hamburg, Biocentre Klein Flottbek, Ohnhorststr. 18, 22609 Hamburg, GermanyIn many parts of Africa, spatially-explicit information on plant α-diversity, i.e., the number of species in a given area, is missing as baseline information for spatial planning. We present an approach on how to combine vegetation-plot databases and remotely-sensed land surface phenology (LSP) metrics to predict plant α-diversity on a regional scale. We gathered data on plant α-diversity, measured as species density, from 999 vegetation plots sized 20 m × 50 m covering all major vegetation units of the Okavango basin in the countries of Angola, Namibia and Botswana. As predictor variables, we used MODIS LSP metrics averaged over 12 years (250-m spatial resolution) and three topographic attributes calculated from the SRTM digital elevation model. Furthermore, we tested whether additional climatic data could improve predictions. We tested three predictor subsets: (1) remote sensing variables; (2) climatic variables; and (3) all variables combined. We used two statistical modeling approaches, random forests and boosted regression trees, to predict vascular plant α-diversity. The resulting maps showed that the Miombo woodlands of the Angolan Central Plateau featured the highest diversity, and the lowest values were predicted for the thornbush savanna in the Okavango Delta area. Models built on the entire dataset exhibited the best performance followed by climate-only models and remote sensing-only models. However, models including climate data showed artifacts. In spite of lower model performance, models based only on LSP metrics produced the most realistic maps. Furthermore, they revealed local differences in plant diversity of the landscape mosaic that were blurred by homogenous belts as predicted by climate-based models. This study pinpoints the high potential of LSP metrics used in conjunction with biodiversity data derived from vegetation-plot databases to produce spatial information on a regional scale that is urgently needed for basic natural resource management applications.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/5/370AngolaBotswanadry tropical forestsEVIMiomboMODISNamibiaphenological metricspredictive modelingspecies density
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rasmus Revermann
Manfred Finckh
Marion Stellmes
Ben J. Strohbach
David Frantz
Jens Oldeland
spellingShingle Rasmus Revermann
Manfred Finckh
Marion Stellmes
Ben J. Strohbach
David Frantz
Jens Oldeland
Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
Remote Sensing
Angola
Botswana
dry tropical forests
EVI
Miombo
MODIS
Namibia
phenological metrics
predictive modeling
species density
author_facet Rasmus Revermann
Manfred Finckh
Marion Stellmes
Ben J. Strohbach
David Frantz
Jens Oldeland
author_sort Rasmus Revermann
title Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
title_short Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
title_full Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
title_fullStr Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
title_full_unstemmed Linking Land Surface Phenology and Vegetation-Plot Databases to Model Terrestrial Plant α-Diversity of the Okavango Basin
title_sort linking land surface phenology and vegetation-plot databases to model terrestrial plant α-diversity of the okavango basin
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2016-04-01
description In many parts of Africa, spatially-explicit information on plant α-diversity, i.e., the number of species in a given area, is missing as baseline information for spatial planning. We present an approach on how to combine vegetation-plot databases and remotely-sensed land surface phenology (LSP) metrics to predict plant α-diversity on a regional scale. We gathered data on plant α-diversity, measured as species density, from 999 vegetation plots sized 20 m × 50 m covering all major vegetation units of the Okavango basin in the countries of Angola, Namibia and Botswana. As predictor variables, we used MODIS LSP metrics averaged over 12 years (250-m spatial resolution) and three topographic attributes calculated from the SRTM digital elevation model. Furthermore, we tested whether additional climatic data could improve predictions. We tested three predictor subsets: (1) remote sensing variables; (2) climatic variables; and (3) all variables combined. We used two statistical modeling approaches, random forests and boosted regression trees, to predict vascular plant α-diversity. The resulting maps showed that the Miombo woodlands of the Angolan Central Plateau featured the highest diversity, and the lowest values were predicted for the thornbush savanna in the Okavango Delta area. Models built on the entire dataset exhibited the best performance followed by climate-only models and remote sensing-only models. However, models including climate data showed artifacts. In spite of lower model performance, models based only on LSP metrics produced the most realistic maps. Furthermore, they revealed local differences in plant diversity of the landscape mosaic that were blurred by homogenous belts as predicted by climate-based models. This study pinpoints the high potential of LSP metrics used in conjunction with biodiversity data derived from vegetation-plot databases to produce spatial information on a regional scale that is urgently needed for basic natural resource management applications.
topic Angola
Botswana
dry tropical forests
EVI
Miombo
MODIS
Namibia
phenological metrics
predictive modeling
species density
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/5/370
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