4.7 Article

Changes in greening in the high Arctic: insights from a 30 year AVHRR max NDVI dataset for Svalbard

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/11/10/105004

Keywords

reduced greening trend; satellite observations of vegetation; 30 year time series of NDVI on Svalbard; effects of warming on vegetation productivity

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway's projects 'Predicting effects of climate change on Svalbard reindeer population dynamics: a mechanistic approach' (POLARPROG) [216051]
  2. 'The effects on population dynamical key-processes of a changing climate in arctic ecosystems' (NORKLIMA) [178561/S30]
  3. ArcticBiomass project [227064/E10]
  4. Polish-Norwegian programme of the EEA Norway Grants (WICLAP) [198571]

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Satellite-aided studies of vegetation cover, biomass and productivity are becoming increasingly important for monitoring the effects of a changing climate on the biosphere. With their large spatial coverage and good temporal resolution, space-borne instruments are ideal to observe remote areas over extended time periods. However, long time series datasets with global coverage have in many cases too low spatial resolution for sparsely vegetated high latitude areas. This study has made use of a newly developed 30 year 1 km spatial resolution dataset from 1986 to 2015, provided by the NOAA AVHRR series of satellites, in order to calculate the annual maximum NDVI over parts of Svalbard (78 degrees N). This parameter is indicative of vegetation productivity and has therefore enabled us to study long-term changes in greening within the Inner Fjord Zone on Svalbard. In addition, local meteorological data are available to link maximum NDVI values to the temporal behavior of the mean growing season (summer) temperature for the study area. Over the 30 year period, we find positive trends in both maximum NDVI (average increase of 29%) and mean summer temperature (59%), which were significantly positively correlated with each other. This suggests a temporal greening trend mediated by summer warming. However, as also recently reported for lower latitudes, the strength of the year-to-year correlation between maximum NDVI and mean summer temperature decreased, suggesting that the response of vegetation to summer warming has not remained the same over the entire study period.

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