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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/29000
Title: | Incorporating high-resolution climate, remote sensing and topographic data to map annual forest growth in central and eastern Europe | Authors: | Jevšenak, Jernej Klisz, Marcin Mašek, Jiří Čada, Vojtěch Janda, Pavel Svoboda, Miroslav Vostarek, Ondřej Treml, Vaclav van der Maaten, Ernst Popa, Andrei Popa, Ionel van der Maaten-Theunissen, Marieke Zlatanov, Tzvetan Scharnweber, Tobias Ahlgrimm, Svenja Stolz, Juliane Sochová, Irena Roibu, Cătălin-Constantin Pretzsch, Hans Schmied, Gerhard Uhl, Enno Kaczka, Ryszard Wrzesiński, Piotr Šenfeldr, Martin Jakubowski, Marcin Tumajer, Jan Wilmking, Martin Obojes, Nikolaus Rybníček, Michal Lévesque, Mathieu Potapov, Aleksei Basu, Soham Stojanović, Marko Stjepanović, Stefan Vitas, Adomas Arnič, Domen Metslaid, Sandra Neycken, Anna Prislan, Peter Hartl, Claudia Ziche, Daniel Horáček, Petr Krejza, Jan Mikhailov, Sergei Světlík, Jan Kalisty, Aleksandra Kolář, Tomáš Lavnyy, Vasyl Hordo, Maris Oberhuber, Walter Levanič, Tom Mészáros, Ilona Schneider, Lea Lehejček, Jiří Shetti, Rohan Bošeľa, Michal Copini, Paul Koprowski, Marcin Sass-Klaassen, Ute Izmir, Şule Ceyda Bakys, Remigijus Entner, Hannes Esper, Jan Janecka, Karolina Martinez Del Castillo, Edurne Verbylaite, Rita Árvai, Mátyás de Sauvage, Justine Charlet Čufar, Katarina Finner, Markus Hilmers, Torben Kern, Zoltán Novak, Klemen Ponjarac, Radenko Puchałka, Radosław Schuldt, Bernhard Škrk Dolar, Nina Tanovski, Vladimir Zang, Christian Žmegač, Anja Kuithan, Cornell Metslaid, Marek Thurm, Eric Hafner, Polona Krajnc, Luka Bernabei, Mauro Bojić, Stefan Brus, Robert Burger, Andreas D'Andrea, Ettore Đorem, Todor Gławęda, Mariusz Gričar, Jožica Gutalj, Marko Horváth, Emil Kostić, Saša Matović, Bratislav Merela, Maks Miletić, Boban Morgós, András Paluch, Rafał Pilch, Kamil Rezaie, Negar Rieder, Julia Schwab, Niels Sewerniak, Piotr Stojanović, Dejan Ullmann, Tobias Waszak, Nella Zin, Ewa Skudnik, Mitja Oštir, Krištof Rammig, Anja Buras, Allan |
Issue Date: | 29-Dec-2023 | Publisher: | Elsevier BV | Journal: | Science of The Total Environment | Abstract: | To enhance our understanding of forest carbon sequestration, climate change mitigation and drought impact on forest ecosystems, the availability of high-resolution annual forest growth maps based on tree-ring width (TRW) would provide a significant advancement to the field. Site-specific characteristics, which can be approximated by high-resolution Earth observation by satellites (EOS), emerge as crucial drivers of forest growth, influencing how climate translates into tree growth. EOS provides information on surface reflectance related to forest characteristics and thus can potentially improve the accuracy of forest growth models based on TRW. Through the modelling of TRW using EOS, climate and topography data, we showed that species-specific models can explain up to 52 % of model variance (Quercus petraea), while combining different species results in relatively poor model performance (R2 = 13 %). The integration of EOS into models based solely on climate and elevation data improved the explained variance by 6 % on average. Leveraging these insights, we successfully generated a map of annual TRW for the year 2021. We employed the area of applicability (AOA) approach to delineate the range in which our models are deemed valid. The calculated AOA for the established forest-type models was 73 % of the study region, indicating robust spatial applicability. Notably, unreliable predictions predominantly occurred in the climate margins of our dataset. In conclusion, our large-scale assessment underscores the efficacy of combining climate, EOS and topographic data to develop robust models for mapping annual TRW. This research not only fills a critical void in the current understanding of forest growth dynamics but also highlights the potential of integrated data sources for comprehensive ecosystem assessments. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/29000 | DOI: | 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.169692 |
Appears in Collections: | Hans Em Faculty of Forest Sciences, Landscape Architecture and Environmental Engineering: Journal Articles |
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