Title
Changes in Global Grassland Productivity during 1982 to 2011 Attributable to Climatic Factors.
Abstract
Open, Grass-and Forb-Dominated (OGFD) ecosystems, including tundra, tropical grasslands and savanna, provide habitat for both wild and domesticated large ungulate herbivores. These ecosystems exist across a wide temperature gradient from the Arctic regions to the Equator, but are confined to a narrow set of moisture conditions that range from arid deserts to forest-dominated systems. Primary productivity in OGFD ecosystems appears extremely sensitive to environmental change. We compared global trends in the annual maximum and mean values of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and identified the key bioclimatic indices that controlled OGFD productivity changes in various regions for the period from 1982 to 2011. We found significantly increased or decreased annual maximum NDVI values of 36.3% and 4.6% for OGFD ecosystems, respectively. Trends in the annual mean NDVI are similar for most OGFD ecosystems and show greater area decreases and smaller area increases than trends in the annual maximum NDVI in global OGFD ecosystems during the study period. Ecosystems in which the productivity significantly increased were distributed mainly in the Arctic, mid-eastern South America, central Africa, central Eurasia and Oceania, while those with decreasing trends in productivity were mainly on the Mongolian Plateau. Temperature increases tended to improve productivity in colder OGFD ecosystems; and precipitation is positively correlated with productivity changes in grassland and savannas, but negatively correlated with changes in the Arctic tundra. Simple bioclimatic indices explain 42% to 55% of productivity changes in OGFD systems worldwide, and the main climatic predictors of productivity differed significantly between regions. In light of future climate change, the findings of this study will help support management of global OGFD ecosystems.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.3390/rs8050384
REMOTE SENSING
Keywords
Field
DocType
NDVI,bioclimatic index,stepwise multiple regression,grassland,savanna,tundra
Tundra,Ecology,Climate change,Arid,Grassland,Environmental change,Geology,Tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands,Arctic,Ecosystem
Journal
Volume
Issue
Citations 
8
5
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
10
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Qingzhu Gao141.28
Mark W. Schwartz200.34
Wenquan Zhu3146.83
Yunfan Wan440.94
Xiaobo Qin540.94
Xin Ma600.34
Shuo Liu740.94
Matthew A. Williamson800.34
Casey B. Peters900.34
Yue Li1013342.96