4.6 Article

Topographic controls on vegetation index in a hilly landscape: a case study in the Jiaodong Peninsula, eastern China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 70, Issue 2, Pages 625-634

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12665-012-2146-5

Keywords

Topography; Spatial variation; Temporal variation; NDVI

Funding

  1. Scientific Research Encouragement Foundation for Outstanding Young and Middle Scientist of Shandong Province [BS2010HZ018]
  2. Public Science and Technology Research Funds Projects of Ocean [201205001]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40801016]
  4. Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [kzcx2-yw-224]
  5. Taishan Scholar Position [TS200651036]

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This study examined topographic influence on spatial and temporal variability in the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) derived from the Satellite Pour l'Observation de la Terre-Vegetation at the regional and landscape scales in the Jiaodong Peninsula. The generalized additive models were used to quantify the spatial variation of NDVI attributable to local terrain and topographically related variables including altitude, exposure to incoming solar radiation, topographic wetness index, distance to the nearest stream and distance from the coast. NDVI distribution shows significant dependence on topography. The variables explained 38.3 % of variance in NDVI at the peninsula, and 30-45.3 % of variance in NDVI at the woodland, cropland, and grassland landscapes. At the Jiaodong Peninsula scale, NDVI is influenced primarily by distance from the coast. However, topographic wetness index has the most explanatory power for NDVI at the woodland, cropland, and grassland landscapes. Through a statistical nonparametric correlation analysis (Spearman's r), the study indicates that spatial distribution of NDVI changes during the period 1998-2009 and future change trend of persistence determined by Hurst exponent is closely associated with topography and topography-based attribution. These results highlight the importance of topographic changes at landscape and regional scales as an important control factor on NDVI patterns.

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