Monitoring changes in boreal peatland vegetation after restoration with optical satellite imagery
Isoaho, A., Elo, M., Marttila, H., Rana, P., Lensu, A., & Räsänen, A. (2024). Monitoring changes in boreal peatland vegetation after restoration with optical satellite imagery. Science of the Total Environment, 957, Article 177697. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.177697
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Science of the Total EnvironmentAuthors
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2024Copyright
© 2024 the Authors
Restoration can initiate a succession of plant communities towards those of pristine peatlands. Field inventory-based vegetation monitoring is labour-intensive and not feasible for every restored site. While remote sensing has been used to monitor hydrological changes in peatlands, it has been less used to monitor post-restoration changes in vegetation composition. We utilised vegetation inventories from Finnish peatland monitoring network containing 10-year before-after-control-impact monitoring data from 150 peatland sites, representing three peatland types (spruce mire forests, pine mire forests, open mires), and optical observations from Landsat 5–9 and Sentinel-2 satellites. We employed non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) to produce floristic gradients, representing wetness and productivity, from the vegetation data. We constructed random forest regression models with NMDS dimensions, i.e. floristic gradients, as response variables and satellite imagery variables as the predictors. Our results show that the floristic gradients in different peatland types should be monitored with different satellite imagery variables. However, midsummer NIR and red band consistently explain variation in the gradients in all peatland types. Our results indicate that the gradients and the post-restoration changes in them can be modelled with reasonable accuracy in open mires and sparsely treed pine mire forests but not in densely treed spruce mire forests. We suggest that optical satellite imagery can serve as a proxy for assessing the post-restoration vegetation changes in peatlands with little or no trees.
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ElsevierISSN Search the Publication Forum
0048-9697Keywords
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https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/244339394
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This study was funded by the Ministry of Environment, Finland (VN/14352/2022).License
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