Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/144486
Título: Characterizing the Response of Vegetation Cover to Water Limitation in Africa Using Geostationary Satellites
Autor: Küçük, Çağlar
Koirala, Sujan
Carvalhais, Nuno
Miralles, Diego G.
Reichstein, Markus
Jung, Martin
Palavras-chave: Africa
ecohydrology
fractional vegetation cover
geostationary
water limitation
Global and Planetary Change
Environmental Chemistry
Earth and Planetary Sciences(all)
Data: Mar-2022
Citação: Küçük, Ç., Koirala, S., Carvalhais, N., Miralles, D. G., Reichstein, M., & Jung, M. (2022). Characterizing the Response of Vegetation Cover to Water Limitation in Africa Using Geostationary Satellites. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.1029/2021MS002730
Resumo: Hydrological interactions between vegetation, soil, and topography are complex, and heterogeneous in semi-arid landscapes. This along with data scarcity poses challenges for large-scale modeling of vegetation-water interactions. Here, we exploit metrics derived from daily Meteosat data over Africa at ca. 5 km spatial resolution for ecohydrological analysis. Their spatial patterns are based on Fractional Vegetation Cover (FVC) time series and emphasize limiting conditions of the seasonal wet to dry transition: the minimum and maximum FVC of temporal record, the FVC decay rate and the FVC integral over the decay period. We investigate the relevance of these metrics for large scale ecohydrological studies by assessing their co-variation with soil moisture, and with topographic, soil, and vegetation factors. Consistent with our initial hypothesis, FVC minimum and maximum increase with soil moisture, while the FVC integral and decay rate peak at intermediate soil moisture. We find evidence for the relevance of topographic moisture variations in arid regions, which, counter-intuitively, is detectable in the maximum but not in the minimum FVC. We find no clear evidence for wide-spread occurrence of the “inverse texture effect” on FVC. The FVC integral over the decay period correlates with independent data sets of plant water storage capacity or rooting depth while correlations increase with aridity. In arid regions, the FVC decay rate decreases with canopy height and tree cover fraction as expected for ecosystems with a more conservative water-use strategy. Thus, our observation-based products have large potential for better understanding complex vegetation-water interactions from regional to continental scales.
Descrição: Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/144486
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2021MS002730
ISSN: 1942-2466
Aparece nas colecções:FCT: DCEA - Artigos em revista internacional com arbitragem científica



FacebookTwitterDeliciousLinkedInDiggGoogle BookmarksMySpace
Formato BibTex MendeleyEndnote 

Todos os registos no repositório estão protegidos por leis de copyright, com todos os direitos reservados.