Abstract

Land cover changes significantly influence vegetation greenness in different regions. Dense Landsat time series stacks provide unique opportunity to analyze land cover change and vegetation greenness trends at finer spatial scale. In the past three decades, large reclamation activities have greatly changed land cover and vegetation growth of coastal areas. However, rarely has research investigated these frequently changed coastal areas. In this study, Landsat Normalized Difference Vegetation Index time series (1984–2016) data and the Breaks For Additive Seasonal and Trend algorithm were used to detect the intensity and dates of abrupt changes in a typical coastal area—Hangzhou Bay, China. The prior and posterior land cover categories of each change were classified using phenology information through a Random Forest model. The impacts of land cover change on vegetation greenness trends of the inland and reclaimed areas were analyzed through distinguishing gradual and abrupt changes. The results showed that the intensity and date of land cover change were detected successfully with overall accuracies of 88.7% and 86.1%, respectively. The continuous land cover dynamics were retrieved accurately with an overall accuracy of 91.0% for ten land cover classifications. Coastal reclamation did not alleviate local cropland occupation, but prompted the vegetation greenness of the reclaimed area. Most of the inland area showed a browning trend. The main contributors to the greenness and browning trends were also quantified. These findings will help the natural resource management community generate better understanding of coastal reclamation and make better management decisions.

Highlights

  • Land cover change is one of the most important factors profoundly affecting the earth’s ecological systems [1,2]

  • The accuracy assessment for change detection results (Table 2) showed that the land cover change was successfully detected with an overall accuracy of 88.7%

  • The land cover was mainly changed to herb, water, and construction land

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Summary

Introduction

Land cover change is one of the most important factors profoundly affecting the earth’s ecological systems [1,2]. Land cover changes can be related to natural processes (e.g., flooding, wildfire) and anthropogenic activities (e.g., urbanization, agriculture). The rate of change and the nature of land cover changes can differ in time and space [3]. Some regions are relatively stable (e.g., permanent forest), whereas other areas are subject to rapid and persistent transformation (e.g., urban expansion of previously vegetated areas). Previous studies showed that land cover change can lead to either increases or decreases in vegetation greenness [4,5,6].

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