干旱
植被(病理学)
环境科学
物候学
植被指数
地理
自然地理学
水文学(农业)
遥感
归一化差异植被指数
生态学
地质学
气候变化
医学
岩土工程
病理
生物
作者
Xiaofei Sun,Yingzhi Zhou,Susu Jia,Huaiyong Shao,Meng Liu,Shiqi Tao,Xiaoai Dai
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120678
摘要
Measuring the impact of mining activities on vegetation phenology and assessing the sensitivity of vegetation indices (VIs) to it are crucial for understanding land degradation in mining areas and enhancing the carbon sink capacity following the ecological restoration of mines. To this end, we have developed a novel technical framework to quantify the impact of mining activities on vegetation, and applied it to the Bainaimiao copper mining area in Inner Mongolia. Phenological indices are extracted based on the VI time series data of Sentinel-2, and changes in phenological differences in various directions are used to quantify the impact of mining activities on vegetation. Finally, indicators such as mean difference, standard deviation, index value distribution interval, and concentration of index value distribution were selected to assess the sensitivity of the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), Green Chlorophyll Index (GCI), Global Environmental Monitoring Index (GEMI), Green Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (GNDVI), Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Renormalized Difference Vegetation Index (RDVI), Red-Edge Chlorophyll Index (RECI), and Soil-Adjusted Vegetation Index (SAVI) to mining activities. The results of the study show that the impact of mining activities on surrounding vegetation extends to an area three times larger than the actual mining activity area. When compared with the reference and unaffected areas, the affected area experienced a delay of approximately 10 days in seasonal vegetation development. Environmental pollution caused by the tailings pond was identified as the primary factor influencing this delay. Significant variations in the sensitivity of each VI to assess mining activities in arid/semi-arid areas were observed. Notably, GCI, GNDVI and RDVI displayed relatively high sensitivity to discrepancies in the spectral attributes of vegetation within the affected area, while SAVI reflected the overall spectral stability of the vegetation in the affected area. The research findings have the potential to provide valuable technical guidance for holistic environmental management in mining areas and hold great significance in preventing further land degradation and supporting ecological restoration in mining areas. • A novel framework for quantifying the impacts of mining activities on vegetation. • The sensitivity of 8 VIs to mining activities is assessed. • The area of vegetation by mining activities is 3 times larger than the actual mining site. • GCI, GNDVI, RDVI and SAVI are more sensitive to mining activities in arid/semi-arid areas.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI