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Characterizing aboveground biomass and tree cover of regrowing forests in Brazil using multi‐source remote sensing data

Authors

Chen,  Na
External Organizations;

Tsendbazar,  Nandin‐Erdene
External Organizations;

Requena Suarez,  Daniela
External Organizations;

Verbesselt,  Jan
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/herold

Herold,  Martin
1.4 Remote Sensing, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Pettorelli,  Nathalie
External Organizations;

Abdi,  Abdulhakim
External Organizations;

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5019316.pdf
(Publisher version), 2MB

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Citation

Chen, N., Tsendbazar, N., Requena Suarez, D., Verbesselt, J., Herold, M. (2023): Characterizing aboveground biomass and tree cover of regrowing forests in Brazil using multi‐source remote sensing data. - Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation, 9, 4, 553-567.
https://doi.org/10.1002/rse2.328


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5019316
Abstract
Characterization of regrowing forests is vital for understanding forest dynamics to assess the impacts on carbon stocks and to support sustainable forest management. Although remote sensing is a key tool for understanding and monitoring forest dynamics, the use of exclusively remotely sensed data to explore the effects of different variables on regrowing forests across all biomes in Brazil has rarely been investigated. Here, we analyzed how environmental and human factors affect regrowing forests. Based on Brazil's secondary forest age map, 3060 locations disturbed between 1984 and 2018 were sampled, interpreted and analyzed in different biomes. We interpreted the time since disturbance for the sampled pixels in Google Earth Engine. Elevation, slope, climatic water deficit (CWD), the total Nitrogen of soil, cation exchange capacity (CEC) of soil, surrounding tree cover, distance to roads, distance to settlements and fire frequency were analyzed in their importance for predicting aboveground biomass (AGB) and tree cover derived from global forest aboveground biomass map and tree cover map, respectively. Results show that time since disturbance interpreted from satellite time series is the most important predictor for characterizing AGB and tree cover of regrowing forests. AGB increased with increasing time since disturbance, surrounding tree cover, soil total N, slope, distance to roads, distance to settlements and decreased with larger fire frequency, CWD and CEC of soil. Tree cover increased with larger time since disturbance, soil total N, surrounding tree cover, distance to roads, distance to settlements, slope and decreased with increasing elevation and CWD. These results emphasize the importance of remotely sensing products as key opportunities to improve the characterization of forest regrowth and to reduce data gaps and uncertainties related to forest carbon sink estimation. Our results provide a better understanding of regional forest dynamics, toward developing and assessing effective forest-related restoration and climatic mitigation strategies.