Frontiers in Environmental Science (May 2024)

Quantifiable impact: monitoring landscape restoration from space. A regreening case study in Tanzania

  • Mendy van der Vliet,
  • Yoann Malbeteau,
  • Darren Ghent,
  • Sander de Haas,
  • Karen L. Veal,
  • Thijs van der Zaan,
  • Rajiv Sinha,
  • Saroj K. Dash,
  • Rasmus Houborg,
  • Richard A. M. de Jeu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2024.1352058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The impact of ecosystem conservation and restoration activities are rarely monitored from a global, multidimensional and multivariable perspective. Here we present an approach to quantify the environmental impact of landscape restoration using long-term and high-resolution satellite observations. For two restoration areas in Tanzania, we can likely attribute an increase in the amount of water retained by the soil (∼0.01 m³ m⁻³, ∼13% average increase), a soil temperature drop (∼-0.5°C) and an increase in surface greenness (∼50% average increase) in 3.5 years. These datasets illuminate the impact of restoration initiatives on the landscape and support the reporting of comprehensive metrics to donors and partners. Satellite observations from commercial providers and space agencies are now achieving the frequency, resolution, and accuracy that can allow for the effective evaluation of restoration activities.

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