Remote Sensing (Mar 2019)

Trends in Woody and Herbaceous Vegetation in the Savannas of West Africa

  • Julius Y. Anchang,
  • Lara Prihodko,
  • Armel T. Kaptué,
  • Christopher W. Ross,
  • Wenjie Ji,
  • Sanath S. Kumar,
  • Brianna Lind,
  • Mamadou A. Sarr,
  • Abdoul A. Diouf,
  • Niall P. Hanan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11050576
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 576

Abstract

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We assess 32 years of vegetation change in the West African Sudano-Sahelian region following the drought events of the 1970s and 1980s. Change in decadal mean rain use efficiency is used to diagnose trends in woody vegetation that is expected to respond more slowly to post-drought rainfall gains, while change in the slope of the productivity–rainfall relationship is used to infer changing herbaceous conditions between early and late periods of the time series. The linearity/non-linearity of the productivity–rainfall relationship and its impact on the interpretation of overall greening trends, and specific woody and herbaceous vegetation trends, is also examined. Our results show a mostly positive association between productivity and rainfall (69% of pixels), which can be best described as linear (32%) or saturating (37%). Choosing the ‘best’ model at a specific location using Akaike Information Criterion has no discernible effect on the interpretation of overall greening or herbaceous trends, but does influence the detection of trends in woody vegetation. We conclude that widespread recovery in woody vegetation is responsible for the post-drought greening phenomenon reported elsewhere for the Sahel and Sudanian sub-regions. Meanwhile, trends in herbaceous vegetation are less pronounced, with no consistent indication towards either herbaceous degradation or recovery.

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