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Can human-induced land degradation be distinguished from the effects of rainfall variability? A case study in South Africa

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 68, Issue 2, Pages 271-297

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2006.05.015

Keywords

monitoring; AVHRR; NDVI; rain-use efficiency; NPP; communal lands; South Africa

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Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR), Normalized Difference Vegetation Index data (NDVI, I km(2), 1985-2003) and modeled net primary production (NPP, 8 km(2), 1981-2000) data were used to estimate vegetation production in South Africa (SA). The linear relationships of Log,Rainfall with NPP and Sigma NDVI were calculated for every pixel. Vegetation production generally had a strong relationship with rainfall over most of SA. Therefore, human-induced land degradation can only be detected if its impacts on vegetation production can be distinguished from the effects of rainfall. Two methods were tested (i) Rain-Use Efficiency (RUE = NPP/Rainfall or Sigma NDVI/ Rainfall) and (ii) Residual Trends (RESTREND), i.e. negative trends in the differences between the observed Sigma NDVI and the Sigma NDVI predicted by the rainfall. Degraded areas mapped by the National Land Cover in north-eastern SA had reduced RUE; however, annual RUE had a very strong negative correlation with rainfall and varied greatly between years. Therefore, RUE was not a reliable indicator of degradation. The RESTREND method showed promising results at a national scale and in the Limpopo Province, where negative trends were often associated with degraded areas in communal lands. Both positive and negative residual trends can, however, result from natural ecological processes, e.g. the carryover effects of rainfall in previous years. Thus, the RESTREND method can only identify potential problem areas at a regional scale, while the cause of negative trends has to be determined by local investigations. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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