Department of Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.
Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 02138, USA.
Sci Rep. 2018 Feb 26;8(1):3622. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-22075-5.
In many dryland environments, vegetation self-organizes into bands that can be clearly identified in remotely-sensed imagery. The status of individual bands can be tracked over time, allowing for a detailed remote analysis of how human populations affect the vital balance of dryland ecosystems. In this study, we characterize vegetation change in areas of the Horn of Africa where imagery taken in the early 1950s is available. We find that substantial change is associated with steep increases in human activity, which we infer primarily through the extent of road and dirt track development. A seemingly paradoxical signature of human impact appears as an increase in the widths of the vegetation bands, which effectively increases the extent of vegetation cover in many areas. We show that this widening occurs due to altered rates of vegetation colonization and mortality at the edges of the bands, and conjecture that such changes are driven by human-induced shifts in plant species composition. Our findings suggest signatures of human impact that may aid in identifying and monitoring vulnerable drylands in the Horn of Africa.
在许多旱地环境中,植被会自行组织成带,可以在遥感图像中清晰地识别。单个带的状态可以随时间进行跟踪,从而可以对人类活动如何影响旱地生态系统的重要平衡进行详细的远程分析。在这项研究中,我们对非洲之角地区的植被变化进行了特征描述,这些地区在 20 世纪 50 年代早期的图像是可用的。我们发现,与人类活动的急剧增加有关的重大变化,我们主要通过道路和土路发展的程度来推断。人类影响的一个看似矛盾的特征表现为植被带宽度的增加,这实际上增加了许多地区的植被覆盖范围。我们表明,这种变宽是由于带边缘的植被定居和死亡速度的变化引起的,并推测这种变化是由人类引起的植物物种组成变化所驱动的。我们的研究结果表明,人类影响的特征可能有助于识别和监测非洲之角的脆弱旱地。