灌木
横断面
专题制图器
干旱
自然地理学
生态学
牧场
地形地貌
航空摄影
地理
丰度(生态学)
环境科学
遥感
卫星图像
地图学
生物
作者
Cho‐ying Huang,Steven R. Archer,Mitchel P. McClaran,Stuart E. Marsh
出处
期刊:PeerJ
[PeerJ, Inc.]
日期:2018-09-05
卷期号:6: e5474-e5474
被引量:29
摘要
Shifts in the abundance of grasses and woody plants in drylands have occurred several times during the Holocene. However, our understanding of the rates and dynamics of this state-change in recent decades is limited to scattered studies conducted at disparate spatial and temporal scales; the potential misperceptions of shrub cover change could be remedied using cross spatiotemporal scale analyses that link field observations, repeat ground-level photography and remote sensing perspectives. The study was conducted across a semi-arid landscape in southern Arizona. Local data from long-term transects revealed three distinct chronological phases of shrub cover change: expansion (1961–1991, 0.7% y −1 ), decline (1992–1997, −2.3% y −1 ) and stabilization (1998–2012, 22–25% with no net cover change). Twenty-eight years (1984–2011) of broad-scale Landsat Thematic Mapper assessments confirm that shrub cover has been relatively stable in recent decades regardless of grazing regimes and landforms with the exception of the proliferation of succulents at lower elevations (verified by repeat photography acquired in 1987 and 2015) where the physical environment is the harshest, reflecting elevated temperature and winter precipitation deficit. Warmer, drier future climates are predicted to reduce woody plant carrying capacity and promote a shift to xerophytic succulents.
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