The Basilicata region summarizes many basic features of the biogeographic complexity characterizing Mediterranean countries. The intricate geomorphology and the long history of human management generated the current landscapes, which include both high-value ecosystems and areas prone to desertification. Preserving goods and services provided by such composite land cover mosaics poses many problems due to the interference/overlap of diverse natural and anthropic factors which make the correct selection of relevant parameters and the interpretation of observational data rather difficult. Here, we study interconnections between local climate and vegetation activity by correlating parameters characterizing the interannual statistics of the NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), derived from satellite data, with a recently devised multivariate statistical index of meteoclimatic variability. We used a 15-year sequence of remote images concerning a set of plots located around meteorological ground stations of the central-eastern part of the region to pick up spatial structures in the vegetation–climate relationships. Our analyses were able to correlate spatial heterogeneity to variations in water exchanges between vegetation and atmosphere. This study represents a first step to improve the description of relevant processes to protect natural habitats and quality agriculture, therefore combating land degradation and climate change detrimental effects.

Investigating climate variability and long-term vegetation activity across heterogeneous Basilicata agroecosystems / Coluzzi, Rosa; D’Emilio, Mariagrazia; Imbrenda, Vito; Giorgio, Giuseppina A.; Lanfredi, Maria; Macchiato, Maria; Ragosta, Maria; Simoniello, Tiziana; Telesca, Vito. - In: GEOMATICS, NATURAL HAZARDS & RISK. - ISSN 1947-5705. - 10:1(2019), pp. 168-180. [10.1080/19475705.2018.1513872]

Investigating climate variability and long-term vegetation activity across heterogeneous Basilicata agroecosystems

Macchiato, Maria;
2019

Abstract

The Basilicata region summarizes many basic features of the biogeographic complexity characterizing Mediterranean countries. The intricate geomorphology and the long history of human management generated the current landscapes, which include both high-value ecosystems and areas prone to desertification. Preserving goods and services provided by such composite land cover mosaics poses many problems due to the interference/overlap of diverse natural and anthropic factors which make the correct selection of relevant parameters and the interpretation of observational data rather difficult. Here, we study interconnections between local climate and vegetation activity by correlating parameters characterizing the interannual statistics of the NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), derived from satellite data, with a recently devised multivariate statistical index of meteoclimatic variability. We used a 15-year sequence of remote images concerning a set of plots located around meteorological ground stations of the central-eastern part of the region to pick up spatial structures in the vegetation–climate relationships. Our analyses were able to correlate spatial heterogeneity to variations in water exchanges between vegetation and atmosphere. This study represents a first step to improve the description of relevant processes to protect natural habitats and quality agriculture, therefore combating land degradation and climate change detrimental effects.
2019
Investigating climate variability and long-term vegetation activity across heterogeneous Basilicata agroecosystems / Coluzzi, Rosa; D’Emilio, Mariagrazia; Imbrenda, Vito; Giorgio, Giuseppina A.; Lanfredi, Maria; Macchiato, Maria; Ragosta, Maria; Simoniello, Tiziana; Telesca, Vito. - In: GEOMATICS, NATURAL HAZARDS & RISK. - ISSN 1947-5705. - 10:1(2019), pp. 168-180. [10.1080/19475705.2018.1513872]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/728786
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