Authors
Rasmus Fensholt, Tobias Langanke, Kjeld Rasmussen, Anette Reenberg, Stephen D Prince, Compton Tucker, Robert J Scholes, Quang Bao Le, Alberte Bondeau, Ron Eastman, Howard Epstein, Andrea E Gaughan, Ulf Hellden, Cheikh Mbow, Lennart Olsson, Jose Paruelo, Christian Schweitzer, Jonathan Seaquist, Konrad Wessels
Publication date
2012/6/1
Journal
Remote sensing of environment
Volume
121
Pages
144-158
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Semi-arid areas, defined as those areas of the world where water is an important limitation for plant growth, have become the subject of increased interest due to the impacts of current global changes and sustainability of human lifestyles. While many ground-based reports of declining vegetation productivity have been published over the last decades, a number of recent publications have shown a nuanced and, for some regions, positive picture. With this background, the paper provides an analysis of trends in vegetation greenness of semi-arid areas using AVHRR GIMMS from 1981 to 2007. The vegetation index dataset is used as a proxy for vegetation productivity and trends are analyzed for characterization of changes in semi-arid vegetation greenness. Calculated vegetation trends are analyzed with gridded data on potential climatic constraints to plant growth to explore possible causes of the observed changes …
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320247254652596162827289969946