Signatures of wetland impact: Spatial distribution of forest aboveground biomass in tumen river basin

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Abstract

The Tumen River Basin, located in the cross-border region of China, North Korea, and Russia, constitutes an important ecological barrier in China. Forest here is mainly distributed around wetland, with the distribution of wetland having the potential to regulate regional forest carbon storage. However, the spatially explicit map of forest aboveground biomass (AGB) and potential impact of drivers, i.e., wetland distribution and climate, is still lacking. We thus use a deep neural network and multi-source remote sensing data to quantify forest AGB in the Tumen River Basin. Our results show the mean forest AGB is 103.43 Mg ha−1, with divergent spatial variation along its distance to wetland. The results of correlation analysis showed that with sufficient soil moisture supply, temperature dominant spatial variation of forest aboveground biomass. Noted that using the space for time substitution, we find when wetland decreased by less than 11.1%, the forest AGB decreased by more than 8%. Our result highlight the signatures of wetland impact on its nearby forest carbon storage, and urge the wetland protection, especially under the warming and drying future.

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Lv, G., Cui, G., Wang, X., Yu, H., Huang, X., Zhu, W., & Lin, Z. (2021). Signatures of wetland impact: Spatial distribution of forest aboveground biomass in tumen river basin. Remote Sensing, 13(15). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13153009

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