Abstract

This study investigated the complex relationship among groundwater salinity, soil texture, and vegetation health in Al-Ahsa Oasis, Saudi Arabia. Utilizing vegetation condition index data from 5 years of satellite imagery, alongside ground measurements of groundwater salinity and soil analysis, the study unveiled significant spatial heterogeneity. The vegetation health and groundwater salinity in the study area ranged from 27 to 70% and from 1.7 to 9.6 dS m−1, respectively, and exhibited contrasting patterns, with a high vegetation condition index (healthy vegetation) in the north and east versus high salinity in the southwest. The applied cross-tabulation statistics revealed a strong negative correlation between the vegetation condition index and salinity, with “good” and “normal” vegetation health primarily coinciding with “slightly saline” groundwater. Soil texture further modulated the vegetation response, as “Silt loam” soils corresponded with “good” VCI, while “silty clay loam” only supported “dry” and “normal” conditions. The applied spatial autocorrelation analysis confirmed this, showing low vegetation clustering with “silt” texture and high salinity in the mid-west of the study area (p < 0.05). Outlier districts hint at local factors beyond simple salinity–vegetation health relationships. Finally, a conditional plot, applied as a spatial statistical approach, revealed that low vegetation health spatially correlates with high groundwater salinity (>5 dS m−1) on “silt loam” in the mid-west, while a higher vegetation condition index aligned with lower groundwater salinity in the east and north. These findings highlight the critical role of spatial variability and the need for advanced modeling and data integration to understand and predict the responses of vegetation to environmental challenges, and will be crucial for optimizing water management to ensure the long-term sustainability of Al-Ahsa Oasis.

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