Trend Analysis of Relationship between Primary Productivity, Precipitation and Temperature in Inner Mongolia

被引:10
|
作者
Chen, Tianyang [1 ]
Xie, Yichun [1 ]
Liu, Chao [2 ]
Bai, Yongfei [3 ]
Zhang, Anbing [4 ]
Mao, Lishen [5 ]
Fan, Siyu [1 ]
机构
[1] Eastern Michigan Univ, Inst Geospatial Res & Educ, Ypsilanti, MI 48197 USA
[2] Anhui Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Geomat, 168 Taifeng Ave, Huainan, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Bot, Beijing 100093, Peoples R China
[4] Hebei Univ Engn, Sch Min & Geomat, 199 South Guangming St, Handan, Peoples R China
[5] Univ Georgia, Dept Geog, 210 Field St 204, Athens, GA 30602 USA
关键词
Inner Mongolia; vegetation growth; climate change; partial effect; EMD filtering; redundancy analysis; EMPIRICAL MODE DECOMPOSITION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; VEGETATION DYNAMICS; GRASSLAND DEGRADATION; LAND DEGRADATION; NDVI; RESPONSES; IMPACTS; ECOSYSTEMS; STRATEGIES;
D O I
10.3390/ijgi7060214
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
This study mainly examined the relationships among primary productivity, precipitation and temperature by identifying trends of change embedded in time-series data. The paper also explores spatial variations of the relationship over four types of vegetation and across two precipitation zones in Inner Mongolia, China. Traditional analysis of vegetation response to climate change uses minimum, maximum, average or cumulative measurements; focuses on a whole region instead of fine-scale regional or ecological variations; or adopts generic analysis techniques. We innovatively integrate Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD) and Redundancy Analysis (RDA) to overcome the weakness of traditional approaches. The EMD filtered trend surfaces reveal clear patterns of Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), precipitation, and temperature changes in both time and space. The filtered data decrease noises and cyclic fluctuations in the original data and are more suitable for examining linear relationship than the original data. RDA is further applied to reveal partial effect of precipitation and temperature, and their joint effect on primary productivity. The main findings are as follows: (1) We need to examine relationships between the trends of change of the variables of interest when investigating long-term relationships among them. (2) Long-term trend of change of precipitation or temperature can become a critical factor influencing primary productivity depending on local environments. (3) Synchronization (joint effect) of precipitation and temperature in growing season is critically important to primary productivity in the study area. (4) Partial and joint effects of precipitation and temperature on primary productivity vary over different precipitation zones and different types of vegetation. The method developed in this paper is applicable to ecosystem research in other regions.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Regionalization and Analysis of Precipitation Variations in Inner Mongolia
    Wang, Wei
    Guo, Jiao
    ATMOSPHERE, 2025, 16 (02)
  • [2] Responses of gross primary productivity to different sizes of precipitation events in a temperate grassland ecosystem in Inner Mongolia, China
    Guo Qun
    Li Shenggong
    Hu Zhongmin
    Zhao Wei
    Yu Guirui
    Sun Xiaomin
    Li Linghao
    Liang Naishen
    Bai Wenming
    JOURNAL OF ARID LAND, 2016, 8 (01) : 36 - 46
  • [3] Responses of gross primary productivity to different sizes of precipitation events in a temperate grassland ecosystem in Inner Mongolia, China
    GUO Qun
    LI Shenggong
    HU Zhongmin
    ZHAO Wei
    YU Guirui
    SUN Xiaomin
    LI Linghao
    LIANG Naishen
    BAI Wenming
    Journal of Arid Land, 2016, 8 (01) : 36 - 46
  • [4] Responses of gross primary productivity to different sizes of precipitation events in a temperate grassland ecosystem in Inner Mongolia, China
    Qun Guo
    Shenggong Li
    Zhongmin Hu
    Wei Zhao
    Guirui Yu
    Xiaomin Sun
    Linghao Li
    Naishen Liang
    Wenming Bai
    Journal of Arid Land, 2016, 8 : 36 - 46
  • [5] Non-linear response of productivity to precipitation extremes in the Inner Mongolia grassland
    Sun, Jiamei
    Zhang, Bin
    Pan, Qingmin
    Liu, Wei
    Wang, Xiaoliang
    Huang, Jianhui
    Chen, Dima
    Wang, Changhui
    Han, Xingguo
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 37 (06) : 1663 - 1673
  • [6] Effects of manipulated precipitation on aboveground net primary productivity of grassland fields: Controlled rainfall experiments in Inner Mongolia, China
    Xu, Xiaotian
    Liu, Hongyan
    Wang, Wei
    Hu, Guozheng
    Wu, Xiuchen
    Song, Zhaoliang
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 32 (05) : 1981 - 1992
  • [7] How precipitation legacies affect broad-scale patterns of primary productivity: Evidence from the Inner Mongolia grassland
    Zhao, Yujin
    Lu, Xiaoming
    Wang, Yang
    Bai, Yongfei
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2022, 320
  • [8] Impacts of climate change on net primary productivity of grasslands in Inner Mongolia
    Li, Qiuyue
    Tuo, Debao
    Zhang, Lizhen
    Wei, Xiaoyu
    Wei, Yurong
    Yang, Ning
    Xu, Yinlong
    Anten, Niels P. R.
    Pan, Xuebiao
    RANGELAND JOURNAL, 2014, 36 (05): : 493 - 503
  • [9] Effects of climate change on phenology and primary productivity in the desert steppe of Inner Mongolia
    Fang Han
    Qing Zhang
    Alexander Buyantuev
    JianMing Niu
    PengTao Liu
    XingHua Li
    Sarula Kang
    Jing Zhang
    ChangMing Chang
    YunPeng Li
    Journal of Arid Land, 2015, 7 : 251 - 263
  • [10] Effects of climate change on phenology and primary productivity in the desert steppe of Inner Mongolia
    Han, Fang
    Zhang, Qing
    Buyantuev, Alexander
    Niu, JianMing
    Liu, PengTao
    Li, XingHua
    Kang, Sarula
    Zhang, Jing
    Chang, Ming
    Li, YunPeng
    JOURNAL OF ARID LAND, 2015, 7 (02) : 251 - 263