Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index

To alleviate grassland degradation and improve ecosystem functions, the Chinese government has implemented some ecological projects since 2004 across the Tibetan Plateau, such as ‘Return Grazing Land to Grassland Project’ and the ‘Compensation and Rewards to Herders for Natural Grassland Conservatio...

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Autores principales: Meng Li, Huilin Yu, Baoping Meng, Yi Sun, Jianguo Zhang, Huifang Zhang, Jianshuang Wu, Shuhua Yi
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/5fd6a35051c7459d80c7b0265d1fe9a4
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:5fd6a35051c7459d80c7b0265d1fe9a42021-12-01T04:59:48ZDrought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index1470-160X10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108158https://doaj.org/article/5fd6a35051c7459d80c7b0265d1fe9a42021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X21008232https://doaj.org/toc/1470-160XTo alleviate grassland degradation and improve ecosystem functions, the Chinese government has implemented some ecological projects since 2004 across the Tibetan Plateau, such as ‘Return Grazing Land to Grassland Project’ and the ‘Compensation and Rewards to Herders for Natural Grassland Conservation’. Meanwhile, the frequency and intensity of drought events have strengthened in this plateau. However, how grasslands respond to these projects and drought remains controversial. Here, taking the northern Tibetan Plateau (NTP) as the study area, we first quantified the spatiotemporal changes in the annual maximum grassland NDVI (NDVImax) after the implementation of the ecological projects (2005–2015). Then, we assessed the effects of drought (Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index, SPEI) and ecological projects on the dynamics of NDVImax. The results showed that (1) the grazing intensity decreased significantly across the NTP after the start of ecological projects, but grassland NDVImax did not increase as expected. Statistically, 53.7% of grasslands showed a decreasing NDVImax, of which 5.7% had a significant decrease (P < 0.05), mainly in the central and eastern NTP. (2) NDVImax positively correlated with SPEI at the pixel, county, and regional scales, suggesting that drought was the driving force for the decreasing NDVImax. The severe and extreme drought events in 2015 contributed to 9.4% and 17.7% reduction of grassland NDVImax, respectively. (3) The residual analysis demonstrated that there were 4.4% of the grasslands experienced human-induced degradation. However, on the whole, the effects of ecological projects on vegetation changes of the NTP were positive. Our findings suggested that the positive effects of the ecological projects on vegetation growth were relatively mitigated or offset by drought. Thus, we question the validity of evaluating the effectiveness of ecological projects only according to the trend of vegetation productivity derived from remote-sensing based vegetation index.Meng LiHuilin YuBaoping MengYi SunJianguo ZhangHuifang ZhangJianshuang WuShuhua YiElsevierarticleAlpine grasslandDegradationDroughtEcological projectsTibetan PlateauEcologyQH540-549.5ENEcological Indicators, Vol 130, Iss , Pp 108158- (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Alpine grassland
Degradation
Drought
Ecological projects
Tibetan Plateau
Ecology
QH540-549.5
spellingShingle Alpine grassland
Degradation
Drought
Ecological projects
Tibetan Plateau
Ecology
QH540-549.5
Meng Li
Huilin Yu
Baoping Meng
Yi Sun
Jianguo Zhang
Huifang Zhang
Jianshuang Wu
Shuhua Yi
Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
description To alleviate grassland degradation and improve ecosystem functions, the Chinese government has implemented some ecological projects since 2004 across the Tibetan Plateau, such as ‘Return Grazing Land to Grassland Project’ and the ‘Compensation and Rewards to Herders for Natural Grassland Conservation’. Meanwhile, the frequency and intensity of drought events have strengthened in this plateau. However, how grasslands respond to these projects and drought remains controversial. Here, taking the northern Tibetan Plateau (NTP) as the study area, we first quantified the spatiotemporal changes in the annual maximum grassland NDVI (NDVImax) after the implementation of the ecological projects (2005–2015). Then, we assessed the effects of drought (Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index, SPEI) and ecological projects on the dynamics of NDVImax. The results showed that (1) the grazing intensity decreased significantly across the NTP after the start of ecological projects, but grassland NDVImax did not increase as expected. Statistically, 53.7% of grasslands showed a decreasing NDVImax, of which 5.7% had a significant decrease (P < 0.05), mainly in the central and eastern NTP. (2) NDVImax positively correlated with SPEI at the pixel, county, and regional scales, suggesting that drought was the driving force for the decreasing NDVImax. The severe and extreme drought events in 2015 contributed to 9.4% and 17.7% reduction of grassland NDVImax, respectively. (3) The residual analysis demonstrated that there were 4.4% of the grasslands experienced human-induced degradation. However, on the whole, the effects of ecological projects on vegetation changes of the NTP were positive. Our findings suggested that the positive effects of the ecological projects on vegetation growth were relatively mitigated or offset by drought. Thus, we question the validity of evaluating the effectiveness of ecological projects only according to the trend of vegetation productivity derived from remote-sensing based vegetation index.
format article
author Meng Li
Huilin Yu
Baoping Meng
Yi Sun
Jianguo Zhang
Huifang Zhang
Jianshuang Wu
Shuhua Yi
author_facet Meng Li
Huilin Yu
Baoping Meng
Yi Sun
Jianguo Zhang
Huifang Zhang
Jianshuang Wu
Shuhua Yi
author_sort Meng Li
title Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
title_short Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
title_full Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
title_fullStr Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
title_full_unstemmed Drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: Perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
title_sort drought reduces the effectiveness of ecological projects: perspectives from the inter-annual variability of vegetation index
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/5fd6a35051c7459d80c7b0265d1fe9a4
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