Probabilistic assessment of remote sensing-based terrestrial vegetation vulnerability to drought stress of the Loess Plateau in China

被引:180
作者
Fang, Wei [1 ]
Huang, Shengzhi [1 ]
Huang, Qiang [1 ]
Huang, Guohe [2 ]
Wang, Hao [3 ]
Leng, Guoyong [4 ,5 ]
Wang, Lu [1 ]
Guo, Yi [1 ]
机构
[1] Xian Univ Technol, Sch Water Resources & Hydropower, State Key Lab Ecohydraul Northwest Arid Reg China, Xian 710048, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Regina, Inst Energy Environm & Sustainable Communities, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada
[3] China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, State Key Lab Simulat & Regulat Water Cycle River, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China
[4] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Water Cycle & Related Land Surface Proc, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
[5] Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, Oxford OX1 3QY, England
关键词
Vegetation health; Drought stress; Copula method; Conditional probability; Vulnerability analysis; STANDARDIZED PRECIPITATION INDEX; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SOIL-MOISTURE; ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION; METEOROLOGICAL DROUGHT; AGRICULTURAL DROUGHT; RIPARIAN VEGETATION; ECO-ENVIRONMENT; CARBON BALANCE; WATER DEMAND;
D O I
10.1016/j.rse.2019.111290
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Quantitative understanding of vegetation vulnerability under drought stress is essential to initiating drought preparedness and mitigation. In this study, a bivariate probabilistic framework is developed for assessing vegetation vulnerability and mapping drought-prone ecosystems more informatively, which is different from previous studies conducted in a deterministic way. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) is initially correlated to the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) at contrasting timescales to evaluate the degree of vegetation dependence on water availability and screen out the vegetation response time. Afterward, the monthly NDVI series is connected with the most correlated SPI to derive joint distributions using a copula method. On such basis, conditional probabilities of vegetation losses are estimated under multiple drought scenarios and used for revealing tempo-spatial patterns of vegetation vulnerability. Particular focus is directed to the Loess Plateau (LP), China, which is a world-famous environmentally fragile area. Results indicate that the proposed framework is valid for vegetation vulnerability assessment as the pair-wise SPI-NDVI observations fall within high-density areas of the estimated NDVI distributions. From a probabilistic perspective, roughly 95% of the LP exhibits greater probability of vegetation losses when suffering from water deficits rather than water surplus. Vegetation loss probabilities reaching their peak (39.7%) in summer indicate the highest vegetation vulnerability to drought stress in summer months sequentially followed by autumn (32.9%) and spring (31.0%), which is linked to marked variations in water requirement at different stages of vegetation growth. Spatially, drought-vulnerable regions are identified in the western edge with vegetation loss probability 20.6% higher than the LP mean value, suggesting higher vulnerability in more arid areas. Irrigation practices and large-scale vegetation restoration, as two important sources of anthropogenic disturbance in the LP, benefit the decreased vegetation vulnerability over the majority of affected areas. Results may increase our knowledge about climatic controls on vegetation health and support the ecosystem restoration planning in the LP.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 129 条
[61]   A compound event framework for understanding extreme impacts [J].
Leonard, Michael ;
Westra, Seth ;
Phatak, Aloke ;
Lambert, Martin ;
van den Hurk, Bart ;
McInnes, Kathleen ;
Risbey, James ;
Schuster, Sandra ;
Jakob, Doerte ;
Stafford-Smith, Mark .
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2014, 5 (01) :113-128
[62]   Detecting and attributing vegetation changes on China's Loess Plateau [J].
Li, Jingjing ;
Peng, Shouzhang ;
Li, Zhi .
AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2017, 247 :260-270
[63]   NDVI-Based Analysis on the Influence of Climate Change and Human Activities on Vegetation Restoration in the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Region, Central China [J].
Li, Shuangshuang ;
Yang, Saini ;
Liu, Xianfeng ;
Liu, Yanxu ;
Shi, Mimi .
REMOTE SENSING, 2015, 7 (09) :11163-11182
[64]   Grazing exclusion alters soil microbial respiration, root respiration and the soil carbon balance in grasslands of the Loess Plateau, northern China [J].
Li, Xudong ;
Zhang, Chunping ;
Fu, Hua ;
Guo, Ding ;
Song, Xiongru ;
Wan, Changgui ;
Ren, Jizhou .
SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT NUTRITION, 2013, 59 (06) :877-887
[65]   Spatial distribution and temporal trends of extreme temperature and precipitation events on the Loess Plateau of China during 1961-2007 [J].
Li, Zhi ;
Zheng, Fen-li ;
Liu, Wen-zhao ;
Flanagan, Dennis C. .
QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 226 (1-2) :92-100
[66]   MODELLING THE EFFECT OF VEGETATION COVER AND DIFFERENT TILLAGE PRACTICES ON SOIL EROSION IN VINEYARDS: A CASE STUDY IN VRABLE (SLOVAKIA) USING WATEM/SEDEM [J].
Lieskovsky, J. ;
Kenderessy, P. .
LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2014, 25 (03) :288-296
[67]   Responses of vegetation cover to the Grain for Green Program and their driving forces in the He-Long region of the middle reaches of the Yellow River [J].
Liu, JianXiang ;
Li, ZhiGuang ;
Zhang, XiaoPing ;
Li, Rui ;
Liu, XianChun ;
Zhang, HanYang .
JOURNAL OF ARID LAND, 2013, 5 (04) :511-520
[68]   Spatial-temporal changes in vegetation cover in a typical semi-humid and semi-arid region in China: Changing patterns, causes and implications [J].
Liu, Saiyan ;
Huang, Shengzhi ;
Xie, Yangyang ;
Wang, Hao ;
Huang, Qiang ;
Leng, Guoyong ;
Li, Pei ;
Wang, Lu .
ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2019, 98 :462-475
[69]   Identification of the Non-stationarity of Floods: Changing Patterns, Causes, and Implications [J].
Liu, Saiyan ;
Huang, Shengzhi ;
Xie, Yangyang ;
Wang, Hao ;
Leng, Guoyong ;
Huang, Qiang ;
Wei, Xiaoting ;
Wang, Lu .
WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, 2019, 33 (03) :939-953
[70]   Growth, Morphological, and Physiological Responses to Drought Stress in Bothriochloa ischaemum [J].
Liu, Ying ;
Li, Peng ;
Xu, Guo Ce ;
Xiao, Lie ;
Ren, Zong Ping ;
Li, Zhan Bin .
FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2017, 8 :1-14