Abstract

The Sierra Nevada of California is a region where large wildfires have been suppressed for over a century. A detailed geographic record of recent vegetation regrowth and disturbance patterns in forests of the Sierra Nevada remains a gap that can be filled with remote-sensing data. Landsat Thematic Mapper imagery was analysed to detect 10 years of recent changes (between 2000 and 2009) in forest vegetation cover for areas burned by wildfires between years of 1995 and 1999 in the region. Results confirmed the prevalence of regrowing forest vegetation during the period 2000 and 2009 over 17% of the combined burned areas. Classification of these regrowing forest vegetation areas by the Landsat normalized burn ratio (NBR) showed that there was a marked increase in average disturbance index (ΔDI) values in the transitions from low to moderate to high burn severity classes. Within the five combined wildfire perimeters, 45% of the high burn severity area delineated by the RdNBR analysis was covered by regrowing forest detected between 2000 and 2009. In contrast, a notable fraction (12%) of the entire 5 km (unburned) buffer area outside the 1995–1999 fires perimeters showed decline in forest cover, and not nearly as many regrowing forest areas, covering only 3% of all the 1995–1999 buffer areas combined. Based on comparison of these results to ground-based survey data and high-resolution aerial images, the Landsat difference index (ΔDI) methodology can fulfil much of the need for consistent, low-cost monitoring of changes due to climate and biological factors in western forest regrowth following stand-replacing disturbances.

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