Assessing the coherency of different El Niño events with vegetation health using time-series remote sensing data and wavelet coherency analysis in part of Southeast Asia

IF 3.8 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Sanjiwana Arjasakusuma, Yusri Khoirurrizqi, Tsamarah Huwaida
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a cyclic period of warm and cold events that affect the seasonal global weather patterns due to the weaker trade winds in Pacific Oceans. During the warm ENSO events, or El Niño, regions including Southeast Asia, are exposed to the reduced precipitation and warmer temperatures, which able to affect the vegetation dynamics. El Niño warm events can occur in different magnitudes and intensities but the impacts of different warm ENSO magnitudes to vegetation health is rarely studied. This study explored the coherency of different El Niño events as indicated by ENSO indices with vegetation health in Indonesia by using wavelet semblance analysis (WSA). Our results suggested that short-duration and strong ENSO events highly affected the vegetation dynamics, and potential coupled impact of ENSO warm event and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) such as in 2006 can influence the vegetation health. The 1982, 1997–1998 and 2015–2016 strong ENSO events affected for more than 40 % of vegetation health in Indonesia, while 2006's combined weak-ENSO and IOD events affected up to 44 % of vegetation health. From the total 40–59 % areas that were affected in 1997–1998 ENSO's event, 38–56 % was Evergreen Broadleaf Forests (EBF). This indicates that strong magnitude of El Niño combined with IOD could increase the impact of climate anomalies to the vegetation health.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
8.50%
发文量
204
审稿时长
65 days
期刊介绍: The journal ''Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment'' (RSASE) focuses on remote sensing studies that address specific topics with an emphasis on environmental and societal issues - regional / local studies with global significance. Subjects are encouraged to have an interdisciplinary approach and include, but are not limited by: " -Global and climate change studies addressing the impact of increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases, CO2 emission, carbon balance and carbon mitigation, energy system on social and environmental systems -Ecological and environmental issues including biodiversity, ecosystem dynamics, land degradation, atmospheric and water pollution, urban footprint, ecosystem management and natural hazards (e.g. earthquakes, typhoons, floods, landslides) -Natural resource studies including land-use in general, biomass estimation, forests, agricultural land, plantation, soils, coral reefs, wetland and water resources -Agriculture, food production systems and food security outcomes -Socio-economic issues including urban systems, urban growth, public health, epidemics, land-use transition and land use conflicts -Oceanography and coastal zone studies, including sea level rise projections, coastlines changes and the ocean-land interface -Regional challenges for remote sensing application techniques, monitoring and analysis, such as cloud screening and atmospheric correction for tropical regions -Interdisciplinary studies combining remote sensing, household survey data, field measurements and models to address environmental, societal and sustainability issues -Quantitative and qualitative analysis that documents the impact of using remote sensing studies in social, political, environmental or economic systems
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