Effects of land cover and regional climate variations on long-term spatiotemporal changes in sagebrush ecosystems

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Abstract

This research investigated the effects of climate and land cover change on variation in sagebrush ecosystems. We combined information of multi-year sagebrush distribution derived from multitemporal remote sensing imagery and climate data to study the variation patterns of sagebrush ecosystems under different potential disturbances. We found that less than 40% of sagebrush ecosystem changes involved abrupt changes directly caused by landscape transformations and over 60% of the variations involved gradual changes directly related to climatic perturbations. The primary increases in bare ground and declines in sagebrush vegetation abundance were significantly correlated with the 1996-2006 decreasing trend in annual precipitation.

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Xian, G., Homer, C., & Aldridge, C. (2012). Effects of land cover and regional climate variations on long-term spatiotemporal changes in sagebrush ecosystems. GIScience and Remote Sensing, 49(3), 378–396. https://doi.org/10.2747/1548-1603.49.3.378

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