DocumentCode
142765
Title
Response of vegetation to temperature, precipitation and solar radiation time-scales: A case study over mainland Australia
Author
Donghai Wu ; Xiang Zhao ; Wenqian Zhao ; Bijian Tang ; Wenfang Xu
Author_Institution
Coll. of Global Change & Earth Syst. Sci., Beijing Normal Univ., Beijing, China
fYear
2014
fDate
13-18 July 2014
Firstpage
855
Lastpage
858
Abstract
Climate conditions have important influences on vegetation growth and there are also effects of temporal lags of plants growth to climate factors. This paper is based on GIMMS-NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) and CRU (Climate Research Unit) climate datasets to analyze the relationship between vegetation and climate factors (temperature, precipitation and solar radiation). Results show that Western Australia responds to climate factors at long time-scales, however, Eastern Australia at short time-scales (with mean value of 6.6 months in totally areas). Moreover, vegetation growth in Australia´s coastal areas is mainly influenced by solar radiation, while precipitation and solar radiation jointly play important roles in central Australia.
Keywords
atmospheric precipitation; atmospheric radiation; atmospheric temperature; climatology; vegetation; Australia coastal areas; CRU climate datasets; GIMMS-NDVI; central Australia; climate conditions; climate factors; eastern Australia; mainland Australia; plants growth; precipitation; solar radiation; temperature; temporal lags; vegetation growth; Australia; Correlation coefficient; Meteorology; Solar radiation; Temperature; Vegetation; Vegetation mapping; Climate factors; Precipitation; Solar radiation; Temperature; Vegetation growth;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Quebec City, QC
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2014.6946559
Filename
6946559
Link To Document