Assessing vegetation response to climatic variations and human activities: spatiotemporal NDVI variations in the Hexi Corridor and surrounding areas from 2000 to 2010

2018 ◽  
Vol 135 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 1179-1193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qingyu Guan ◽  
Liqin Yang ◽  
Wenqian Guan ◽  
Feifei Wang ◽  
Zeyu Liu ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 78 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qimin Ma ◽  
Yinping Long ◽  
Xiaopeng Jia ◽  
Haibing Wang ◽  
Yongshan Li

2010 ◽  
Vol 29-32 ◽  
pp. 479-483
Author(s):  
Ting Ting Wang ◽  
Yuan Biao Zhang ◽  
Zhi Ning Liang ◽  
Wei Huang

To strengthen monitoring for plastic debris in the ocean, our paper compared debris distributions of 2 special Garbage Patches (The North Pacific Central Gyre and Kuroshio Current area). And then we developed a computer-based optimal searching model to monitor formation and changes of debris in the oceans. We found that winds belts, currents, and regional human activities along with seasonal climatic variations can influence marine litter patterns and trends in deposition.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Hitimana ◽  
Edward K. Mengich ◽  
Teresiah N. Kuria ◽  
Pauline Kimani

Desertification remains one of the most challenging phenomena in the drylands of Kenya, where it affects about 80% of the country. This is because of persistent degradation of these areas by climatic variations, human activities, and overgrazing by livestock and wildlife. In these areas, inhabitants suffer from widespread acute poverty and other adverse effects of drought. In order to effectively and efficiently combat desertification and reduce the impacts of further degradation, the Government of Kenya and partners are committed to developing and implementing methods, approaches, strategies, and mechanisms that would slow down or reverse this phenomenon. This chapter covers an in-depth review of advances made so far in the area of woody resources restoration and sustainable management in the drylands of Kenya through biodiversity assessments, conservation, rehabilitation, afforestation, and reafforestation initiatives and research. Achievements, challenges, and opportunities encountered are highlighted for sustainable development and wise utilization of dryland woody and allied resources.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-78
Author(s):  
Fajar Islam Sitanggang ◽  
Mokhamad Asyief K Budiman ◽  
Andy Afandy ◽  
Budi Prabowo

The balance of the ecosystem in a location is certainly related to the food-eating process that occurs in it. This long process is naturally used by natural organisms to flow the energy cycle chains that exist in each individual. The condition of habitat balance can be identified by the structure of bird guilds in an ecosystem. Quiet curly tourism area has a unified landscape landscape in the form of modified secondary forest. This is indicated by the presence of canopy cover that is no longer dense and modified by human activities. The location of the study this time was carried out in several locations of quiet curup tourist areas, namely in the parking lot and its surroundings, the biodiversity park of Bedegung and its surroundings, the curup waterfalls of calm and surrounding areas. The study was conducted on 6-8 August 2019. Field findings found eight types of bird guilds, namely insectivores, frugivores, carnivores, omnivores, granivores, piscivores, insectivores, frugivores and nectinivores. Most guild members found were insectivores with 43 species of members. The structure of food network pyramids that can be compiled from the results of the study are granivores and frugivores, and pure carnivores occupy the top rank with members of 3 species. Pure carnivore is a top predator in this quiet, steep landscape. Its existence is very important to control the guild population that is below it. So that the balance of the ecosystem in this location can be seen from the benchmarks of the existence of this pure carnivore type.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing-Qi Zhu

Abstract. Dynamic changes of aeolian landforms and desertification under global warming in a middle-latitude desert belt, the Hexi Corridor in China, considered to be one of the source and engine area of sandstorms in China and Northern Hemisphere (NH), is a typical problem of climate change and landscape response, which need a comprehensive understanding of the history and forcing mechanisms of recent landform and environmental changes in the region. Based on the existing high-resolution satellite image interpretations, field investigations and observations, comprehensive evidences from geomorphological, aeolian-physical, granulometrical and geochemical analysis, this study discussed the formation of dune landforms, the mechanism of desertification and their environmental implications in the Hexi Corridor. The analytical results show that 80 % of the sand particles flow within a height of 20–30 cm near the surface, and about half of the sand particles flow within a height of 0.3–0.5 cm near the surface in the Hexi Corridor. The average height of the typical crescent-shaped dunes is about 6.75 m, and the minimum and maximum values are between 2.6 and 11.2 m. On the inter-annual and multi-year time scales, only the crescent-shaped dunes and chains of barchan dunes are moving or wigwagging in the study area, while the parabolic and longitudinal dunes did not move. Under the influence of wind speed, strong wind days and other factors, the dunes at the edge of the Minqin Oasis move the fastest, with a moving speed of about 6.2 m/a. Affected by the main wind direction and other factors, the dunes at the edge of the Dunhuang Oasis move the slowest, with a moving speed of about 0.8 m/a. The main factors affecting the dynamic changes of sandy dunes in the Hexi Corridor are the annual precipitation, the annual average wind speed and the number of annual strong wind days, of which the annual precipitation contributes the largest, indicating that the climate factors have a most important impact on the dynamic change of sand dunes. The cumulative curve of particle size frequency of dune sediments in the Hexi Corridor basically presents a three-segment model, indicating a saltation mode dominated under the action of wind, but superimposed with a small amount of coarser and finer particles dominated by the creeping and suspension models, which is obviously different from that of the Gobi sediments with a dominant two-segment mode. The palaeo-geographical, sedimentological and geochemical evidences indicate that dune sediments in the Hexi Corridor are mainly derived from locally or in-situ raised sandy sediments, which are mainly come from alluvial plains and ancient fluvial sediments, as well as ancient lake plains and lacustrine deposits, aeolian deposits in the piedmont denudation zones of the north and south mountains and modern fluvial sediments in the corridor. In geochemical compositions of major and trace elements, the dunes in the Hexi Corridor have certain similarities and differences to other sandy dunes in the northwest and northern deserts of China or aeolian loess in the Loess Plateau. Sandy dunes in the Hexi Corridor are relatively rich in iron and Co. Considering the proportion of fine particles on the surface, the coverage rate of surface salt crust, and the potential migration of erodible sandy materials, it can be concluded that the Gobi area in the west Hexi Corridor is not the main source area of sandstorms in the middle and east of the corridor, but the north probably is. In the past half century, the warming and humidification of local climate is the main cause of the reduction of sandstorms in the study area, and the Hexi Corridor has a potential trend of anti-desertification, which is mainly controlled by climate change but not human activities. For the oasis areas of the corridor, however, the effective measures to restrict desertification depend on human activities. Restriction of the decline of groundwater is the key to preventing desertification in oases, rather than water transfer from outer river basins.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xia Tang ◽  
Qi Feng

It is important to analyze the characteristics of drought and flood change in an arid area over a long timescale for the evolution of the environment. Historical documents were used to reconstruct a drought and flood grade series for the Hexi Corridor from 0 to 1950 AD. The moving average and wavelet transform processing methods were used to determine the temporal evolution characteristics of droughts and floods, as well as the corresponding relationships with climate change and human activities in the Hexi Corridor after 1000 AD. The results showed the occurrence of eight drought phases (370–410 AD, 790–870 AD, 1050–1150 AD, 1260–1340 AD, 1430–1570 AD, 1710–1770 AD, 1800–1890 AD, and 1910–1950 AD), five flood phases (320–360 AD, 1670–710 AD, 1730–1790 AD, 1810–1860 AD, and 1880–1950 AD), and 3 oscillation periods of drought and flood events. Climate change may have been the main factor inducing droughts and floods before 1580 AD, whereas human activities may have increased the frequency of droughts and floods after the 16th century. Therefore, quantifying the impacts of natural factors and human activities on droughts and floods can provide important theoretical guidance for the prevention and reduction of future disasters.


Larval growth and settlement rates are important larval behaviors for larval protections. The variability of larval growthsettlement rates and physical conditions for 2006-2012 and in the future with potential climate changes was studied using the coupling ROMS-IMBs, and new temperature and current indexes. Forty-four experimental cases were conducted for larval growth patterns and release mechanisms, showing the spatial, seasonal, annual, and climatic variations of larval growthsettlement rates and physical conditions, demonstrating that the slight different larval temperature-adaption and larval release strategies made difference in larval growth-settlement rates, and displaying that larval growth and settlement rates highly depended upon physical conditions and were vulnerable to climate changes.


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