Authors
Rogier de Jong, Sytze de Bruin, Michael Schaepman, David Dent
Publication date
2011/11/10
Source
International Journal of Remote Sensing
Volume
32
Issue
21
Pages
6823-6853
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Land degradation is a global issue on par with climate change and loss of biodiversity, but its extent and severity are only roughly known and there is little detail on the immediate processes – let alone the drivers. Earth-observation methods enable monitoring of land degradation in a consistent, physical way and on a global scale by making use of vegetation productivity and/or loss as proxies. Most recent studies indicate a general greening trend, but improved data sets and analysis also show a combination of greening and browning trends. Statistically based linear trends average out these effects. Improved understanding may be expected from data-driven and process-modelling approaches: new models, model integration, enhanced statistical analysis and modern sensor imagery at medium spatial resolution should substantially improve the assessment of global land degradation.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R de Jong, S de Bruin, M Schaepman, D Dent - International Journal of Remote Sensing, 2011