Remote Sensing of Climate-Vegetation Dynamics and Their Effects on Ecosystems
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Biogeosciences Remote Sensing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 August 2023) | Viewed by 26178
Special Issue Editors
Interests: geoinformatics; land surface phenology; long-term ecological study; biogeochemistry
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant and vegetation phenology; vegetation geography; global change and phenology; global change and plant geography
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Vegetation phenology plays an important role in regulating the water cycle, carbon cycle, productivity, etc., which is largely related to region-specific climatic and non-climatic factors. In the context of the warming climate, the dynamics of local regular climate and large-scale climatic variations, such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), are expected to become more dramatic and subsequently may have substantial effects on vegetation phenology. In addition, climatic extremes such as storms, tropical cyclones, and sporadic events, as well as anthropogenic activities, have abruptly altered the development of vegetative from regional to global scales. With the assistance of long-term in situ observations, PhenoCam monitoring networks, and multisource remotely-sensed datasets, the variations in vegetation phenology and its associations with regular climate, climatic fluctuations, or extremes can be potentially captured and disentangled.
For this Special Issue, we invite scientists applying remote sensing and spatial technology to explore the variations of vegetation phenology in relation to climate. For example, the combination of field observations with remote sensing techniques across scales, relationships between satellite-derived phenology (land surface phenology; LSP), and climate, including regional climate conditions and large-scale atmospheric anomalies, are suitable issues. Studies on the effects of phenological variations in landscape on hydrological processes, water resources, and biogeochemical cycles are also great contributions in this field. The alterations of LSP along land-cover gradient and projections of phenology across scales are all welcome.
Related topics may include, but are not limited to, the following:
- The combination of in situ plant phenological observation and remotely-sensed data across scales.
- Near-surface remote sensing, PhenoCam, and data analysis in relation to climate and disturbances.
- LSP across various climate regions, vegetation types, landscapes, and their controls.
- LSP along rural-to-urban gradient.
- Variations in LSP on evapotranspiration, storage, runoff, sediments, or nutrients in watershed or large scales.
- LSP projections.
Dr. Chung-Te Chang
Prof. Dr. Junhu Dai
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- vegetation phenology
- regular climate
- climatic fluctuation
- disturbance
- phenocam
- multisource remotely sensed data
- time-series
- water resources
- productivity
- biogeochemical cycles
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