Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah

Changes in the extent of woody vegetation represent a major conservation question in many savannah systems around the globe. To address the problem of the current lack of broad-scale cost-effective tools for land cover monitoring in complex savannah environments, we use a multi-scale approach to qua...

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Main Authors: Marston, Christopher G., Aplin, Paul, Wilkinson, David M., Field, Richard, O'Regan, Hannah J.
Format: Article
Published: MDPI 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42735/
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author Marston, Christopher G.
Aplin, Paul
Wilkinson, David M.
Field, Richard
O'Regan, Hannah J.
author_facet Marston, Christopher G.
Aplin, Paul
Wilkinson, David M.
Field, Richard
O'Regan, Hannah J.
author_sort Marston, Christopher G.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Changes in the extent of woody vegetation represent a major conservation question in many savannah systems around the globe. To address the problem of the current lack of broad-scale cost-effective tools for land cover monitoring in complex savannah environments, we use a multi-scale approach to quantifying vegetation change in Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa. We test whether medium spatial resolution satellite data (Landsat, existing back to the 1970s), which have pixel sizes larger than typical vegetation patches, can nevertheless capture the thematic detail required to detect woody encroachment in savannahs. We quantify vegetation change over a 13-year period in KNP, examine the changes that have occurred, assess the drivers of these changes, and compare appropriate remote sensing data sources for monitoring change. We generate land cover maps for three areas of southern KNP using very high resolution (VHR) and medium resolution satellite sensor imagery from February 2001 to 2014. Considerable land cover change has occurred, with large increases in shrubs replacing both trees and grassland. Examination of exclosure areas and potential environmental driver data suggests two mechanisms: elephant herbivory removing trees and at least one separate mechanism responsible for conversion of grassland to shrubs, theorised to be increasing atmospheric CO2. Thus, the combination of these mechanisms causes the novel two-directional shrub encroachment that we observe (tree loss and grassland conversion). Multi-scale comparison of classifications indicates that although spatial detail is lost when using medium resolution rather than VHR imagery for land cover classification (e.g., Landsat imagery cannot readily distinguish between tree and shrub classes, while VHR imagery can), the thematic detail contained within both VHR and medium resolution classifications is remarkably congruent. This suggests that medium resolution imagery contains sufficient thematic information for most broad-scale land cover monitoring requirements in heterogeneous savannahs, while having the benefits of being cost-free and providing a longer historical archive of data than VHR sources. We conclude that monitoring of broad-scale land cover change using remote sensing has considerable potential as a cost-effective tool for both better informing land management practitioners, and for monitoring the future landscape-scale impacts of management policies in savannahs.
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spelling nottingham-427352020-05-04T18:43:48Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42735/ Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah Marston, Christopher G. Aplin, Paul Wilkinson, David M. Field, Richard O'Regan, Hannah J. Changes in the extent of woody vegetation represent a major conservation question in many savannah systems around the globe. To address the problem of the current lack of broad-scale cost-effective tools for land cover monitoring in complex savannah environments, we use a multi-scale approach to quantifying vegetation change in Kruger National Park (KNP), South Africa. We test whether medium spatial resolution satellite data (Landsat, existing back to the 1970s), which have pixel sizes larger than typical vegetation patches, can nevertheless capture the thematic detail required to detect woody encroachment in savannahs. We quantify vegetation change over a 13-year period in KNP, examine the changes that have occurred, assess the drivers of these changes, and compare appropriate remote sensing data sources for monitoring change. We generate land cover maps for three areas of southern KNP using very high resolution (VHR) and medium resolution satellite sensor imagery from February 2001 to 2014. Considerable land cover change has occurred, with large increases in shrubs replacing both trees and grassland. Examination of exclosure areas and potential environmental driver data suggests two mechanisms: elephant herbivory removing trees and at least one separate mechanism responsible for conversion of grassland to shrubs, theorised to be increasing atmospheric CO2. Thus, the combination of these mechanisms causes the novel two-directional shrub encroachment that we observe (tree loss and grassland conversion). Multi-scale comparison of classifications indicates that although spatial detail is lost when using medium resolution rather than VHR imagery for land cover classification (e.g., Landsat imagery cannot readily distinguish between tree and shrub classes, while VHR imagery can), the thematic detail contained within both VHR and medium resolution classifications is remarkably congruent. This suggests that medium resolution imagery contains sufficient thematic information for most broad-scale land cover monitoring requirements in heterogeneous savannahs, while having the benefits of being cost-free and providing a longer historical archive of data than VHR sources. We conclude that monitoring of broad-scale land cover change using remote sensing has considerable potential as a cost-effective tool for both better informing land management practitioners, and for monitoring the future landscape-scale impacts of management policies in savannahs. MDPI 2017-04-29 Article PeerReviewed Marston, Christopher G., Aplin, Paul, Wilkinson, David M., Field, Richard and O'Regan, Hannah J. (2017) Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah. Remote Sensing, 9 (5). 419/1-419/24. ISSN 2072-4292 Savannah; woody encroachment; land cover change; multi-scale; elephant herbivory; shrubs http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/9/5/419 doi:10.3390/rs9050419 doi:10.3390/rs9050419
spellingShingle Savannah; woody encroachment; land cover change; multi-scale; elephant herbivory; shrubs
Marston, Christopher G.
Aplin, Paul
Wilkinson, David M.
Field, Richard
O'Regan, Hannah J.
Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title_full Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title_fullStr Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title_full_unstemmed Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title_short Scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah
title_sort scrubbing up: multi-scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern african savannah
topic Savannah; woody encroachment; land cover change; multi-scale; elephant herbivory; shrubs
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42735/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42735/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42735/