Publication | Open Access
Detecting long-term changes to vegetation in northern Canada using the Landsat satellite image archive
141
Citations
34
References
2011
Year
EngineeringLand UseForestryNorthern CanadaLand CoverTerrestrial SensingLess Intense GreeningChange AnalysisEarth ScienceSocial SciencesVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsForest MeteorologyLong-term ChangesClimate ChangeLandscape ProcessesCoarse ResolutionGeographyCryosphereHigh Resolution ImageryEarth Observation DataLandsat Satellite ImageDeforestationLand Cover MapClimatologyRemote SensingVegetation Science
Analysis of coarse resolution (∼1 km) satellite imagery has provided evidence of vegetation changes in arctic regions since the mid-1980s that may be attributable to climate warming. Here we investigate finer-scale changes to northern vegetation over the same period using stacks of 30 m resolution Landsat TM and ETM + satellite images. Linear trends in the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and tasseled cap indices are derived for four widely spaced national parks in northern Canada. The trends are related to predicted changes in fractional shrub and other vegetation covers using regression tree classifiers trained with plot measurements and high resolution imagery. We find a consistent pattern of greening (6.1–25.5% of areas increasing) and predicted increases in vascular vegetation in all four parks that is associated with positive temperature trends. Coarse resolution (3 km) NDVI trends were not detected in two of the parks that had less intense greening. A range of independent studies and observations corroborate many of the major changes observed.
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