Abstract

Grassland species diversity monitoring is essential to grassland resource protection and utilization. “Spectral variation hypothesis” (SVH) provides a remote sensing method for monitoring grassland species diversity at pixel scale by calculating spectral heterogeneity. However, the pixel spectrum is easily affected by soil and other background factors in natural grassland. Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based imaging spectroscopy provides the possibility of soil information removal by virtue of its high spatial and spectral resolution. In this study, UAV-imaging spectroscopy data with a spatial resolution of 0.2 m obtained in two sites of typical alpine steppe within the Sanjiangyuan National Nature Reserve were used to analyze the relationships between four spectral diversity metrics (coefficient of variation based on NDVI (CVNDVI), coefficient of variation based on multiple bands (CVMulti), minimum convex hull volume (CHV) and minimum convex hull area (CHA)) and two species diversity indices (species richness and the Shannon–Wiener index). Meanwhile, two soil removal methods (based on NDVI threshold and the linear spectral unmixing model) were used to investigate the impact of soil on species diversity estimation. The results showed that the Shannon–Wiener index had a better response to spectral diversity than species richness, and CVMulti showed the best correlation with the Shannon–Wiener index between the four spectral diversity metrics after removing soil information using the linear spectral unmixing model. It indicated that the estimation ability of spectral diversity to species diversity was significantly improved after removing the soil information. Our findings demonstrated the applicability of the spectral variation hypothesis in natural grassland, and illustrated the impact of soil on species diversity estimation.

Highlights

  • Introduction iationsGrassland biodiversity is critical for the long-term restoration and support services of ecosystem functions [1,2,3], and is directly related to human society [4,5]

  • Species richness just reveals how many species exist in a certain region and cannot reflect the uniformity of the distribution of species, but the uniformity can be indicated by Shannon–Wiener index based on the species richness and their relative abundance

  • We compared the relationships between four spectral diversity metrics and two species diversity indices, and further assessed the impact of soil on species diversity estimation based on Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) imaging spectroscopy in a natural alpine steppe in the Sanjiangyuan National Nature Reserve of China

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Summary

Introduction

Grassland biodiversity is critical for the long-term restoration and support services of ecosystem functions [1,2,3], and is directly related to human society [4,5]. Biodiversity is being lost due to climate change and human activities, and this trend is likely to continue in the future [6,7]. Grasslands bear the brunt of biodiversity loss due to ecosystem vulnerability and severe environmental pressure [8,9]. The Aichi target set in response to the continuing loss of global biodiversity has not yet been fully achieved [10]. The biodiversity of grassland can be divided into three levels: genetic diversity, species diversity and ecosystem diversity [11]. As the primary component of biodiversity, the species diversity of grassland remains a top priority in biodiversity monitoring

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