Litcius/Paper detail

Satellite Observed Positive Impacts of Fog on Vegetation

Na Qiao, Lifu Zhang, Changping Huang, Wenzhe Jiao, Gillian Maggs‐Kölling, Eugène Marais, Lixin Wang

2020Geophysical Research Letters23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Fog is an important water source for many ecosystems, especially in drylands. Most fog‐vegetation studies focus on individual plant scale; the relationship between fog and vegetation function at larger spatial scales remains unclear. This hinders an accurate prediction of climate change impacts on dryland ecosystems. To this end, we examined the effect of fog on vegetation utilizing both optical and microwave remote sensing‐derived vegetation proxies and fog observations from two locations at Gobabeb and Marble Koppie within the fog‐dominated zone of the Namib Desert. Significantly positive relationships were found between fog and vegetation attributes from optical data at both locations. The positive relationship was also observed for microwave data at Gobabeb. Fog can explain about 10%–30% of variability in vegetation proxies. These findings suggested that fog impacts on vegetation can be quantitatively evaluated from space using remote sensing data, opening a new window for research on fog‐vegetation interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Vegetation (pathology)Environmental scienceRemote sensingEcosystemSatellitePhysical geographyClimatologyAtmospheric sciencesGeologyGeographyEcologyEngineeringAerospace engineeringBiologyMedicinePathologySoil Moisture and Remote SensingPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsRemote Sensing in Agriculture
Satellite Observed Positive Impacts of Fog on Vegetation | Litcius