Remotely sensed vegetation greening along a restoration gradient of a tropical forest, Kibale National Park, Uganda

Restoration has now emerged as a global priority, with international initiatives such as the “UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030)”. To fulfill the large‐scale global restoration ambitions, an essential step is the monitoring of vegetation recovery after restoration interventions. This stu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land degradation & development 2021-12, Vol.32 (18), p.5166-5177
Hauptverfasser: Valtonen, Anu, Korkiatupa, Eveliina, Holm, Sille, Malinga, Geoffrey M., Nakadai, Ryosuke
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container_end_page 5177
container_issue 18
container_start_page 5166
container_title Land degradation & development
container_volume 32
creator Valtonen, Anu
Korkiatupa, Eveliina
Holm, Sille
Malinga, Geoffrey M.
Nakadai, Ryosuke
description Restoration has now emerged as a global priority, with international initiatives such as the “UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030)”. To fulfill the large‐scale global restoration ambitions, an essential step is the monitoring of vegetation recovery after restoration interventions. This study aimed to evaluate the utility of remotely sensed vegetation indices, using the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and enhanced vegetation index (EVI), to monitor the progress of forest regeneration across a tropical forest restoration project area in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Using the chronosequence approach, results indicated non‐linear patterns in NDVI and EVI across the first 25 years of recovery. Both NDVI and EVI increased for the first 10 years of forest regeneration. This 'greening' phase could be used as the indicator of the successful onset of forest recovery. In particular, the decline of elephant grass, and the consequent arrival of shrubs and trees, can be detected as an increase in NDVI. Primary forests differed from the 25‐year‐old regenerating forests based on the unique combination of low mean and low seasonal variation in EVI. Our results, therefore, suggest that the long‐term success of forest restoration could be monitored by evaluating how closely the combination of mean, and degree of seasonal variation in EVI, resembles that observed in the primary forest.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ldr.4096
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Africa
Ecosystem restoration
Elephant grass
Environmental restoration
EVI
Forests
National parks
NDVI
Normalized difference vegetative index
Recovery
Regeneration
Remote sensing
restoration
Seasonal variations
Shrubs
tropical forest
Tropical forests
Vegetation
Vegetation index
title Remotely sensed vegetation greening along a restoration gradient of a tropical forest, Kibale National Park, Uganda
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