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Dry tropical forests undergo massive conversion and degradation processes. This also holds true for the extensive Miombo forests that cover large parts of Southern Africa. While the largest proportional area can be found in Angola, the country still struggles with food shortages, insufficient medical and educational supplies, as well as the ongoing reconstruction of infrastructure after 27 years of civil war. Especially in rural areas, the local population is therefore still heavily dependent on the consumption of natural resources, as well as subsistence agriculture. This leads, on one hand, to large areas of Miombo forests being converted for cultivation purposes, but on the other hand, to degradation processes due to the selective use of forest resources. While forest conversion in south-central rural Angola has already been quantitatively described, information about forest degradation is not yet available. This is due to the history of conflicts and the therewith connected research difficulties, as well as the remote location of this area. We apply an annual time series approach using Landsat data in south-central Angola not only to assess the current degradation status of the Miombo forests, but also to derive past developments reaching back to times of armed conflicts. We use the Disturbance Index based on tasseled cap transformation to exclude external influences like inter-annual variation of rainfall. Based on this time series, linear regression is calculated for forest areas unaffected by conversion, but also for the pre-conversion period of those areas that were used for cultivation purposes during the observation time. Metrics derived from linear regression are used to classify the study area according to their dominant modification processes.rnWe compare our results to MODIS latent integral trends and to further products to derive information on underlying drivers. Around 13% of the Miombo forests are affected by degradation processes, especially along streets, in villages, and close to existing agriculture. However, areas in presumably remote and dense forest areas are also affected to a significant extent. A comparison with MODIS derived fire ignition data shows that they are most likely affected by recurring fires and less by selective timber extraction. We confirm that areas that are used for agriculture are more heavily disturbed by selective use beforehand than those that remain unaffected by conversion. The results can be substantiated by the MODIS latent integral trends and we also show that due to extent and location, the assessment of forest conversion is most likely not sufficient to provide good estimates for the loss of natural resources.
Das EU-weite Naturschutznetz Natura 2000 (FFH) umfasst über 11% der terrestrischen Ökosystemfläche. Zur langfristigen Erhaltung dieser Gebiete fehlt ein funktionierendes Monitoringsystem mit geeigneten Indikatoren, Parametern und Datenprodukten, die eine regelmäßig wiederholbare, flächendeckende und vor allem kosteneffiziente Erhebung ermöglichen. Hierfür untersucht diese Dissertation moderne, höchstauflösende Satellitendaten und die Möglichkeiten ihrer Anwendung im Naturschutz, insbesondere als Grundlage zur Indikatorenableitung. Es wurden konkrete Anforderungen von Behörden und NGO bzgl. Daten und Indikatorwerten gesammelt und für zwei Untersuchungsgebiete im Naturpark "Hoher Fläming" in Brandenburg umgesetzt. Dazu wurden zwei Aufnahmen des QuickBird-Satelliten akquiriert und mit vorhandenen GIS-Daten kombiniert. Der praktische Teil der Arbeit beschreibt Eigenschaften und Vorverarbeitung aller Daten, ihre Auswertung nach einem objektbasierten Ansatz und die Ableitung spezifischer quantitativer Parameter. Diese beschreiben den Zustand der Ökosysteme und berücksichtigen die sozio-ökonomischen Belastungen, die auf die Flächen einwirken und Nutzungskonflikte verursachen. Auf der Basis dieser Parameter wurden räumliche Indikatoren erprobt. Zur Anwendung auf der lokalen Ebene in bewaldeten Gebieten und für das Monitoring von Offenland-Flächen werden je zwei Indikatoren vorgeschlagen. Für die regionale Ebene wird ein sozio-ökomischer Indikator empfohlen. Diese fünf Indikatoren sind dazu geeignet, ausgewählte Aspekte der (Bio)Diversität in Schutzgebieten zu beschreiben. Sie analysieren Komposition, Struktur und Funktion der Habitat-Typen sowohl auf der regionalen Landschafts-Ebene, als auch auf der lokalen Ökosystem- bzw. Schutzgebiets-Ebene. Alle Indikatoren besitzen einen Nutzen für das Management von Schutzgebieten und bieten zumindest indirekte Hilfe für die Berichterstattung im Sinne der FFH-Richtlinie. Die vorgeschlagenen Indikatoren sind zwar spezifisch auf die lokalen Untersuchungsgebiete zugeschnitten, doch sind die ökologischen Rahmenbedingungen allgemein gültig. Es ist möglich, diese Indikatoren auch in anderen europäischen Regionen mit den gleichen natürlichen Gegebenheiten und sozio-ökonomischen Strukturproblemen anzuwenden. Für die Anwendung verschiedener Fernerkundungsdaten zur Erfüllung von Monitoringaufgaben sprechen die positiven Ergebnisse der durchgeführten Kosten-Nutzen-Analyse. Vor- und Nachteile von Daten und Auswertungsmethoden werden ausführlich diskutiert.
This paper describes the concept of the hyperspectral Earth-observing thermal infrared (TIR) satellite mission HiTeSEM (High-resolution Temperature and Spectral Emissivity Mapping). The scientific goal is to measure specific key variables from the biosphere, hydrosphere, pedosphere, and geosphere related to two global problems of significant societal relevance: food security and human health. The key variables comprise land and sea surface radiation temperature and emissivity, surface moisture, thermal inertia, evapotranspiration, soil minerals and grain size components, soil organic carbon, plant physiological variables, and heat fluxes. The retrieval of this information requires a TIR imaging system with adequate spatial and spectral resolutions and with day-night following observation capability. Another challenge is the monitoring of temporally high dynamic features like energy fluxes, which require adequate revisit time. The suggested solution is a sensor pointing concept to allow high revisit times for selected target regions (1"5 days at off-nadir). At the same time, global observations in the nadir direction are guaranteed with a lower temporal repeat cycle (>1 month). To account for the demand of a high spatial resolution for complex targets, it is suggested to combine in one optic (1) a hyperspectral TIR system with ~75 bands at 7.2"12.5 -µm (instrument NEDT 0.05 K"0.1 K) and a ground sampling distance (GSD) of 60 m, and (2) a panchromatic high-resolution TIR-imager with two channels (8.0"10.25 -µm and 10.25"12.5 -µm) and a GSD of 20 m. The identified science case requires a good correlation of the instrument orbit with Sentinel-2 (maximum delay of 1"3 days) to combine data from the visible and near infrared (VNIR), the shortwave infrared (SWIR) and TIR spectral regions and to refine parameter retrieval.
We use a novel sea-ice lead climatology for the winters of 2002/03 to 2020/21 based on satellite observations with 1 km2 spatial resolution to identify predominant patterns in Arctic wintertime sea-ice leads. The causes for the observed spatial and temporal variabilities are investigated using ocean surface current velocities and eddy kinetic energies from an ocean model (Finite Element Sea Ice–Ice-Shelf–Ocean Model, FESOM) and winds from a regional climate model (CCLM) and ERA5 reanalysis, respectively. The presented investigation provides evidence for an influence of ocean bathymetry and associated currents on the mechanic weakening of sea ice and the accompanying occurrence of sea-ice leads with their characteristic spatial patterns. While the driving mechanisms for this observation are not yet understood in detail, the presented results can contribute to opening new hypotheses on ocean–sea-ice interactions. The individual contribution of ocean and atmosphere to regional lead dynamics is complex, and a deeper insight requires detailed mechanistic investigations in combination with considerations of coastal geometries. While the ocean influence on lead dynamics seems to act on a rather long-term scale (seasonal to interannual), the influence of wind appears to trigger sea-ice lead dynamics on shorter timescales of weeks to months and is largely controlled by individual events causing increased divergence. No significant pan-Arctic trends in wintertime leads can be observed.
The nonhydrostatic regional climate model CCLM was used for a long-term hindcast run (2002–2016) for the Weddell Sea region with resolutions of 15 and 5 km and two different turbulence parametrizations. CCLM was nested in ERA-Interim data and used in forecast mode (suite of consecutive 30 h long simulations with 6 h spin-up). We prescribed the sea ice concentration from satellite data and used a thermodynamic sea ice model. The performance of the model was evaluated in terms of temperature and wind using data from Antarctic stations, automatic weather stations (AWSs), an operational forecast model and reanalyses data, and lidar wind profiles. For the reference run we found a warm bias for the near-surface temperature over the Antarctic Plateau. This bias was removed in the second run by adjusting the turbulence parametrization, which results in a more realistic representation of the surface inversion over the plateau but resulted in a negative bias for some coastal regions. A comparison with measurements over the sea ice of the Weddell Sea by three AWS buoys for 1 year showed small biases for temperature around ±1 K and for wind speed of 1 m s−1. Comparisons of radio soundings showed a model bias around 0 and a RMSE of 1–2 K for temperature and 3–4 m s−1 for wind speed. The comparison of CCLM simulations at resolutions down to 1 km with wind data from Doppler lidar measurements during December 2015 and January 2016 yielded almost no bias in wind speed and a RMSE of ca. 2 m s−1. Overall CCLM shows a good representation of temperature and wind for the Weddell Sea region. Based on these encouraging results, CCLM at high resolution will be used for the investigation of the regional climate in the Antarctic and atmosphere–ice–ocean interactions processes in a forthcoming study.