Woods Hole Research Center, Falmouth, MA, USA.
Northern Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Jun;24(6):2284-2304. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14107. Epub 2018 Mar 24.
Increasing tree mortality from global change drivers such as drought and biotic infestations is a widespread phenomenon, including in the boreal zone where climate changes and feedbacks to the Earth system are relatively large. Despite the importance for science and management communities, our ability to forecast tree mortality at landscape to continental scales is limited. However, two independent information streams have the potential to inform and improve mortality forecasts: repeat forest inventories and satellite remote sensing. Time series of tree-level growth patterns indicate that productivity declines and related temporal dynamics often precede mortality years to decades before death. Plot-level productivity, in turn, has been related to satellite-based indices such as the Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI). Here we link these two data sources to show that early warning signals of mortality are evident in several NDVI-based metrics up to 24 years before death. We focus on two repeat forest inventories and three NDVI products across western boreal North America where productivity and mortality dynamics are influenced by periodic drought. These data sources capture a range of forest conditions and spatial resolution to highlight the sensitivity and limitations of our approach. Overall, results indicate potential to use satellite NDVI for early warning signals of mortality. Relationships are broadly consistent across inventories, species, and spatial resolutions, although the utility of coarse-scale imagery in the heterogeneous aspen parkland was limited. Longer-term NDVI data and annually remeasured sites with high mortality levels generate the strongest signals, although we still found robust relationships at sites remeasured at a typical 5 year frequency. The approach and relationships developed here can be used as a basis for improving forest mortality models and monitoring systems.
由于干旱和生物侵害等全球变化驱动因素,树木死亡率不断增加,这是一种普遍现象,在北方森林带尤为明显,因为那里的气候变化和对地球系统的反馈相对较大。尽管这对科学界和管理界都很重要,但我们在预测景观到大陆尺度的树木死亡率方面的能力有限。然而,有两个独立的信息流有可能为预测死亡率提供信息和改进:重复森林清查和卫星遥感。树木层面的生长模式时间序列表明,生产力下降和相关的时间动态通常在死亡前几十年到几十年就已经出现。反过来,林分生产力与基于卫星的指数有关,如归一化差异植被指数(NDVI)。在这里,我们将这两个数据源联系起来,表明在死亡前 24 年,基于 NDVI 的多个指标已经出现了死亡率的早期预警信号。我们关注的是北美西部北方森林的两个重复森林清查和三个 NDVI 产品,这些地区的生产力和死亡率动态受到周期性干旱的影响。这些数据源涵盖了一系列森林条件和空间分辨率,以突出我们方法的敏感性和局限性。总体而言,结果表明使用卫星 NDVI 来预测死亡率的早期预警信号是有可能的。这些关系在清查、物种和空间分辨率方面基本一致,尽管在异质的白杨林地中,粗尺度图像的实用性有限。更长时间的 NDVI 数据和高死亡率水平的每年重新测量的地点产生了最强的信号,尽管我们仍然在 5 年重新测量一次的地点发现了可靠的关系。这里开发的方法和关系可以作为改进森林死亡率模型和监测系统的基础。