Abstract
ABSTRACTAssessments of tree/grass fractional cover in savannahs using remote sensing are challenging due to the heterogeneous mixture of the two plant functional types. Time-series decomposition models can be used to characterize vegetation phenology from satellite data, but have rarely been used for attributing phenological signal components to different plant functional types. Here, tree/grass dynamics are assessed in savannah ecosystems using time-series decomposition of 14 years of Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) normalized difference vegetation index data acquired from 2002 to 2015. The decomposition method uses harmonic analysis and tests the individual harmonic terms for statistical significance. Field data of fractional cover of trees and grasses were collected for 28 plots in Kruger National Park, South Africa. Matching MODIS pixels were analysed for their tree/grass phenological signals. Tree/grass annual and interannual variability were then assessed based on the harmonic models. In most harmonic cycles, grass-dominated sites had higher amplitudes than tree-dominated sites, while the tree green-up started earlier than grasses, before the start of the wet season. While changes in tree phenology are gradual, grasses present higher variability over time. Tree cover showed a significant correlation with the amplitude (r (correlation coefficient) = −0.59, p = 0.001) and phase of the first harmonic term (r = −0.73, p = 0.0001) and the number of cycles of the second harmonic term (r = 0. 56, p = 0.002). Grass cover was also significantly correlated with the amplitude (r = 0. 51, p = 0.005) and phase of the first harmonic term (r = 0.55, p = 0.002) and the number of cycles of the second harmonic term (r = −0.52, p = 0.005). The positive correlation of grass cover with phase and negative correlation with number of cycles is indicating a late greening period and higher variability, respectively. Tree cover estimated from the phase of the strongest harmonic term showed a positive correlation with field-measured tree cover (R2 (coefficient of determination) = 0.55, p < 0.01, slope = 0.93, root mean square error = 13.26%). The estimated tree cover also had a strong correlation with the woody cover map (r = 0.78, p < 0.01) produced by Bucini. The results show that MODIS time-series data can be used to estimate the fractional tree cover in heterogeneous savannahs from the phase of the plant functional type’s phenological behaviour. This study shows that harmonic analysis is able to discriminate between fractional cover by trees and grasses in savannahs. The quantitative analysis of tree/grass phenology from satellite time-series data enables a better understanding of the dynamics of the tree/grass competition and coexistence.
Highlights
Monitoring long-term changes in the composition of tree/grass cover in savannahs is required for an assessment of the ecosystem response to a changing climate (Yang, Weisberg, and Bristow 2012; Cleland et al 2007)
The results show that Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) time-series data can be used to estimate the fractional tree cover in heterogeneous savannahs from the phase of the plant functional type’s phenological behaviour
Where f ðtÞ stands for the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) for a given composite and f ðtÞ is the mean of the f ðtÞ; An denotes the amplitude A of harmonic term n; ;n represents the phase of the nth harmonic term; and L is the number of observations in the time series
Summary
Monitoring long-term changes in the composition of tree/grass cover in savannahs is required for an assessment of the ecosystem response to a changing climate (Yang, Weisberg, and Bristow 2012; Cleland et al 2007). Remote-sensing methods are currently being developed to enable the exploration and modelling of the role of vegetation dynamics in ecosystems processes, biosphere–atmosphere exchange, and carbon cycle processes (e.g. carbon sequestration). This requires differentiation of plant functional types (PFTs). The influence of human activities (agriculture, wood collection) and physical factors such as rainfall, fire, geology, and herbivory on the tree/grass mixture in savannahs has been extensively studied (Sankaran, Ratnam, and Hanan 2008; Bond and Keeley 2005; Smit et al 2010; Asner et al 2009). Previous studies have conceptualized the distribution of vegetation in savannah as a function of soil, climatic gradient, and human activities (Foody 2003; Chamaille-Jammes, Fritz, and Murindagomo 2006; Chamaille-Jammes and Fritz 2009)
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