posted on 2015-06-01, 09:20authored byA. Hoscilo, Heiko Balzter, E. Bartholomé, M. Boschetti, P. A. Brivio, A. Brink, M. Clerici, J. -F. Pekel
Policymakers, governments and aid agencies require operational environmental monitoring in support of
evidence-based policy-making and resource deployment in crisis situations. For Africa, this is only feasible at sub-continental
scale with a large network of automated meteorological stations, a large number of highly coordinated field observers or with
satellite remote sensing. The challenge with satellite data lies in the derivation of meaningful environmental indicators. This
article describes a conceptual framework for understanding satellite-derived indicators of rainfall and vegetation greenness
trends over Africa. It attributes observed vegetation changes to climatic (i.e. rainfall linked) and non-climatic drivers. A
decade of annual rainfall and vegetation data over sub-Saharan Africa was analysed using satellite-based rainfall estimates
[Famine Early Warning System Rainfall Estimation 2.0 (FEWSNET RFE 2.0)] from National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s (NOAA’s) Climate Prediction Centre and the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) obtained
from the Satellite Pour l’Observation de la Terre Vegetation (SPOT-VGT) sensor. Rainfall and vegetation greenness trends
were analysed for 759 administrative regions of sub-Saharan Africa to identify those regions that have experienced a negative,
positive or stable rainfall/vegetation trend over the period 2001–2010. The character of the relationship between the annual
rainfall and max NDVI trends were examined to identify areas where the changes in greenness could be attributed to
climatic (rainfall) and non-climatic (human land use or ecological disturbance) changes. Regions where increasing rainfall was
associated with vegetation greening were found in West Africa, Central African Republic, West Cameroon and northeastern
part of South Africa, whereas areas with evidence of ‘climatic vegetation degradation’ were located in Southern Madagascar,
Nigeria, Kenya and the Garden Route region of South Africa.
History
Citation
International Journal of Climatology, 2014, DOI: 10.1002/joc.4231
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geography/GIS and Remote Sensing
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
International Journal of Climatology
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the Royal Meteorological Society