Remote Sensing (Feb 2022)

Assessing Land Cover and Ecological Quality Changes in the Forest-Steppe Ecotone of the Greater Khingan Mountains, Northeast China, from Landsat and MODIS Observations from 2000 to 2018

  • Fang Shi,
  • Mingxing Liu,
  • Jie Qiu,
  • Yali Zhang,
  • Huiyi Su,
  • Xupeng Mao,
  • Xin Li,
  • Jiahui Fan,
  • Junsong Chen,
  • Yingying Lv,
  • Wanggu Xu,
  • Zhi Wang,
  • Mingshi Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14030725
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 725

Abstract

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Land cover changes are the main factors driving the evolution of regional ecological quality. These changes must be considered in the strategic formulation of regional or national ecological policies. The forest-steppe ecotone in the Greater Khingan Mountains is an important ecological barrier in northern China. To measure the effect of ecological protection in recent years, Landsat images, object-oriented image segmentation, and convolutional neural networks were used to create land cover datasets of the forest-steppe ecotone. The Carnegie–Ames–Stanford approach (CASA) and the dimidiate pixel model were used to derive net primary productivity (NPP) and fractional vegetation cover (FVC) to assess the ecological quality of this area. The results showed that only grassland and urban land increased, whereas saline–alkali land and desert areas initially increased and then decreased from 2010 to 2018, indicating that the desertification process was substantially curbed. Total NPP increased by 26.3% (2000–2010) and 10.8% (2010–2018). However, NPP decreased slightly in the center of the study area. FVC first decreased and then increased, and the increased areas were concentrated in the forest-steppe ecotone, saline–alkali land, and desert zone in Xin Barag Left Banner. These observations indicate that the ecological quality has gradually improved due to the strict protection of forest and grassland resources and the suppression of desertification. Our results provide potential insights for land use planning and the development of environmental protection measures in the forest-steppe ecotone.

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