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Vegetation dynamics and precipitation sensitivity in three regions of northern pantanal of Mato Grosso
Author(s) -
Tonny Jader de Moraes,
Nadja Gomes Machado,
Marcelo Sacardi Biudes,
Nelson Mário Banga,
Laís Braga Caneppele
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
revista brasileira de ciências ambientais
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2176-9478
pISSN - 1808-4524
DOI - 10.5327/z217694781132
Subject(s) - normalized difference vegetation index , precipitation , environmental science , phenology , lag , vegetation (pathology) , trend analysis , enhanced vegetation index , physical geography , scale (ratio) , geography , climatology , climate change , vegetation index , meteorology , geology , mathematics , cartography , statistics , ecology , medicine , computer network , oceanography , pathology , computer science , biology
The wet areas of the Pantanal provide important services such as water and carbon storage, improved water quality, and climate regulation. Analysis and monitoring of vegetated land and precipitation on a regional scale using remote sensing data can provide important information for the preservation of the landscape and biodiversity of the region. Thus, the purpose was to analyze characteristics of the green cycle of the vegetated surface and to what extent the vegetated surface responds to the variability of precipitation in the Pantanal. The areas include the regions of Cáceres (CAC), Poconé (POC), and Barão de Melgaço (BAM) in Mato Grosso. Time series of accumulated precipitation (PPT) and NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) were used for the period from 2000 to 2016, obtained on NASA's Giovanni platform (National Aeronautics and Space Administration). The analysis of the wavelet transform was applied for NDVI data and there was cross-correlation analysis for PPT and NDVI data. The results showed that the highest correlation between PPT and NDVI was positive with a 1-month lag, but was significant with a lag of up to 3 months. The wavelet analyses showed that the largest wavelet powers occurred at the frequency between 0.5 and 1.3 years, i.e., the NDVI series presented the main variances on the approximately annual scale, indicating that these characteristics are important aspects of local phenology variability, such as cumulative green throughout the year and generalized senescence.

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