Publications
Found 345 publication(s)
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Lehnert, L.; Meyer, H.; Meyer, N.; Reudenbach, C. & Bendix, J. (2014): A hyperspectral indicator system for rangeland degradation on the Tibetan Plateau: A case study towards spaceborne monitoring. Ecological Indicators 39, 54-64.
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DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.12.005
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Abstract:
Abstract:
The Tibetan Plateau suffers from progressive degradation caused by over-grazing due to improper live-
stock management, global climate change and herbivory from small mammals. Therefore, a robust
indicator system for rangeland degradation has to be developed and tested. This paper investigates local
patterns of degradation at two sites (Lake Namco and Mt. Kailash) in Xizang province (China) that are cov-
ered by vegetation types typical of a large portion of the plateau. The suitability of a two-indicator system
is analysed using hyperspectral field measurements, and its transferability to spaceborne data is tested.
The indicators are (1) land-cover fractions derived from linear spectral unmixing and (2) chlorophyll
content as a proxy for nutrient and water availability calculated using hyperspectral vegetation indices
and partial least squares regression. Because cattle remain near settlements overnight in the local semi-
nomadic pastoral system, it can be expected that grazing intensity is highest near the settlement and
declines with increasing distance. Therefore, we tested the effect of distance on both indicators using a
Spearman correlation analysis. The predicted chlorophyll content and land cover fractions of the indica-
tor system were in good agreement with field observations (correlation coefficients between 0.70 and
0.98). High correlations between distance from settlements and land-cover fractions at both study sites
demonstrated that the land-cover fraction is a reliable indicator for degradation. A positive correlation
between distance from settlements and photosynthetically active vegetation (PV) revealed over-grazing
patterns at the first site. Furthermore, the chlorophyll indicator was proven suitable because chlorophyll
concentration declined with increasing distance from settlements. This underlines the over-grazing pat-
tern because cattle excrement was the only external source of nutrients in the ecosystem and it was
positively correlated with grazing intensity. However, at the second site, we found a significant positive
effect of distance on the amount of photosynthetically non-active vegetation; no effect of distance on PV
and chlorophyll content was found. Therefore, no evidence of pasture degradation was detected at the
second site. Regarding the potential use of satellite data for degradation monitoring, we found that (1) the
land-cover indicator derived from multispectral data was more robust than using noise-filtered hyper-
spectral information and (2) the chlorophyll amount indicator was estimated from simulated EnMAP
data with low error rates. Because the proposed two-indicator system can be derived from multi- and
hyperspectral satellite data and combines site conditions and local plant cover, it provides a time-saving
and robust method to measure pasture degradation across large areas, assuming that respective satellite
data are available.
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Keywords: |
remote sensing |
Tibetan Plateau |
Pasture degradation |
Partial least square regression |
field spectrometry |
Linear spectral unmixing |
EnMAP |
Wilcke, W.; Leimer, S.; Peters, T.; Emck, P.; Rollenbeck, R.; Trachte, K.; Valarezo, C. & Bendix, J. (2013): The nitrogen cycle of tropical montane forest in Ecuador turns inorganic under environmental change. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 27(4), 1194-1204.
Lehnert, L.; Bässler, C.; Brandl, R.; Burton, P.J. & Müller, J. (2013): Conservation value of forests attacked by bark beetles: Highest number of indicator species is found in early successional stages. Journal for Nature Conservation 21, 97-104.
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DOI: 10.1016/j.jnc.2012.11.003
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Abstract:
Abstract:
Heavy natural disturbance in large protected areas of former commercial forests increasingly evokes
European parliaments to call for management intervention because a loss of habitats and species is
feared. In contrast, natural early successional habitats have recently been recognised as important for
conservation. Current knowledge in this field mostly results from studies dealing only with selected
taxa. Here we analyse the success of species across 24 lineages of three kingdoms in the Bavarian Forest
National Park (Germany) after 15 years of a European spruce bark beetle (Ips typographus L.) outbreak
that led to rapid canopy opening. Using indicator species analysis, we found 257 species with a significant
preference for open forests and 149 species with a preference for closed forests, but only 82 species with
a preference for the stand conditions transitional between open and closed forests. The large number
of species with a preference for open forests across lineages supports the role of this bark beetle as
a keystone species for a broad array of species. The slowdown of the outbreak after 15 years in the
core zone of the national park resulted in less than half of the area being affected, due to variability in
stand ages and tree species mixtures. Our case study is representative of the tree species composition
and size of many large protected montane areas in Central European countries and illustrates that (1)
natural disturbances increase biodiversity in formerly managed forests and (2) a montane protected area
spanning 10,000 ha of low range mountains is likely sufficient to allow natural disturbances without a
biased loss of closed-forest species.
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Keywords: |
peer reviewed |
Makowski Giannoni, S.; Rollenbeck, R.; Fabian, P. & Bendix, J. (2013): Complex topography influences atmospheric nitrate deposition in a neotropical mountain rainforest. Atmospheric Environment 79, 385–394.
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DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2013.06.023
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Abstract:
Abstract:
Future increase of atmospheric nitrogen deposition in tropical regions is expected to have negative impacts on forests ecosystems and related biogeochemical processes. In tropical mountain forests topography causes complex streamflow and rainfall patterns, governing the atmospheric transport of pollutants and the intensity and spatial variability of deposition. The main goal of the current study is to link spatio-temporal patterns of upwind nitrogen emissions and nitrate deposition in the San Francisco Valley (eastern Andes of southern Ecuador) at different altitudinal levels. The work is based on Scanning Imaging Absorption SpectroMeter for Atmospheric CHartographY (SCIAMACHY) retrieved-NO2 concentrations, NOx biomass burning emissions from the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFEDv3), and regional vehicle emissions inventory (SA-INV) for urban emissions in South America. The emission data is used as input for lagrangian atmospheric backward trajectory modeling (FLEXTRA) to model the transport to the study area. The results show that NO3?NO3? concentrations in occult precipitation samples are significantly correlated to long-range atmospheric secondary nitrogen transport at the highest meteorological stations (MSs) only, whereas for NO3?NO3? concentrations in rain samples this correlation is more pronounced at the lower MSs. We conclude that ion concentrations in occult precipitation at the uppermost MSs are mainly linked to distant emission sources via the synoptic circulation impinging the more exposed higher sites. Lower correlations close to the valley bottom are due to a lower occult precipitation frequency and point to a contamination of the samples by local pollution sources not captured by the used emission data sources.
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Keywords: |
Andes |
atmospheric deposition |
source-receptor model |
altitudinal gradient |
nitrate |
Meyer, H.; Lehnert, L.; Wang, Y.; Reudenbach, C. & Bendix, J., Measuring pasture degradation on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau using hyperspectral dissimilarities and indices(Proc. SPIE, 2013).
Lehnert, L.; Meyer, H.; Meyer, N.; Reudenbach, C. & Bendix, J., Assessing pasture quality and degradation status using hyperspectral imaging: a case study from western Tibet(Proc. SPIE, 2013).
Rüthrich, F.; Thies, B.; Reudenbach, C. & Bendix, J. (2013): Cloud Detection and Analysis on the Tibetan Plateau using Meteosat and CloudSat.. Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres 118, 10082–10099.
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DOI: 10.1002/jgrd.50790
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Abstract:
Abstract:
[1] Previous studies of clouds over the Tibetan Plateau (TiP) were subject to limitations. Surface observations are scarce, and satellite retrievals are not well adapted to the peculiar conditions of the TiP. For the most comprehensive existing cloud data set, provided by the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP), issues were reported for the TiP. It also lacks sufficient spatiotemporal resolution for this topographically complex region. With the Indian Ocean Data Coverage service, European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites provides a Meteosat data set between 1998 and 2008. The resolution of around 6?km at the study area is sufficient even for complex terrain. Based on this data set and on products of the active sensor onboard CloudSat, we develop a novel gross-cloud retrieval for the TiP using logistic regression models. The approach maintains the original Meteosat resolution. Validation against independent CloudSat data reveals good performance. The approach also outperforms the ISCCP pixel level (DX) data set. The resulting data set is the first for the TiP that provides cloud information with sufficient resolution for both day and night. Patterns of cloud frequencies during winter, premonsoon, and monsoon seasons are analyzed. Strong diurnal forcing is found for the plateau. Peaks of cloud frequencies above the slopes occur during afternoon, while they are delayed in the valleys, where high cloud frequencies persist throughout the nights. Above the lower parts of the southern foothills of the Himalayas cloud frequencies were for the first time found to increase until the early morning. Katabatic flows are suspected to be responsible for this pattern by initiating the formation of mesoscale convective systems.
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Keywords: |
Meteosat |
cloud retrieval |
Tibet |
CloudSat |
climatology |
dynamic |
Curatola Fernández, G.F.; Silva, B.; Gawlik, J.; Thies, B. & Bendix, J. (2013): Bracken fern frond status classification in the Andes of southern Ecuador: combining multispectral satellite data and field spectroscopy. International Journal of Remote Sensing 34, 7020-7037.
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DOI: 10.1080/01431161.2013.813091
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Abstract:
Abstract:
In the anthropogenic fire-disturbed ecosystem of the San Francisco Valley in the Andes of southeastern Ecuador, dense stands of an aggressive invasive weed, the southern bracken fern (Pteridium arachnoideum and Pteridium caudatum), dominate the landscape. To secure sustainable land management in the region, a comprehensive understanding of bracken spatial-distribution patterns and life cycle dynamics is crucial. We investigated the possibility of detecting bracken-infested areas and frond status (live, fungi-infected, and dead) by means of a high-resolution QuickBird scene from October 2010 and spectral signatures based on field spectroscopy. After image pre-processing, a two-step classification procedure first delineates the bracken-infested area by means of a maximum-likelihood hard classification. The probability-guided unmixing classifier with field-derived end-members is applied in the second step to obtain the fractional cover of the different frond statuses per pixel. The results showed that the areas infested by bracken could be distinguished from the other land-cover classes with high accuracy (overall accuracy of 0.9973). Also, the three frond statuses could be accurately classified at the sub-pixel level. The ‘dead’ class was the dominant frond status at the time of image acquisition (October 2010). We conclude that the extreme dry spell in October 2010 was particularly responsible for this dominance.
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Keywords: |
Ecuador |
remote sensing |
bracken fern |
image pre-processing |
QuickBird |
Maier, F.; Bendix, J. & Thies, B. (2013): Development and application of a method for the objective differentiation of fog life cycle phases. Tellus Series B Chemical and Physical Meteorology 65, 19971.
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DOI: 10.3402/tellusb.v65i0.19971
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Abstract:
Abstract:
An objective classification of radiation fog in distinct evolutionary stages during its life cycle based on reliable
criteria is essential for various applications, for example for numerical fog modelling and fog forecasting.
However, there have been up to now merely qualitative approaches for the distinction of different
evolutionary stages in radiation fog. Measurements of the microphysical fog properties with an optical particle
counter obtained from droplet measurement technologies together with recordings of the horizontal visibility
(VIS) are statistically analyzed to determine individual evolutionary stages of radiation fog with consistent
microphysical properties. The developed three-stage approach is based on a statistical change point analysis of
the double sum curves of the VIS, the liquid water content, the droplet concentration and the mean radius of
the drop size distributions. It could be shown that each of the three recorded radiation fog occurrences could
be split into three consecutive phases from formation to dissipation, regardless whether the VIS or the
microphysical properties were considered. Having featured consistent microphysical patterns, it could be
assumed that the three separated phases of the single fog occurrence could be aggregated for radiation fog.
Although this classification is statistically reliable, the dataset still has to be extended for a generalization
concerning the separated evolutionary stages.
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Keywords: |
Radiation fog |
double sum curve analysis |
life cycle of radiation fog |
evolutionary stages of radiation fog |
Kühnlein, M.; Appelhans, T.; Thies, B.; Kokhanovsky, A. & Nauss, T. (2013): An evaluation of a semi-analytical cloud property retrieval using MSG SEVIRI, MODIS and CloudSat. Atmospheric Research 122, 111–135.
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DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosres.2012.10.029
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Abstract:
Abstract:
Knowledge of cloud properties such as cloud effective radius (aef) and optical thickness (?) is essential to understand their role in the dynamic radiation budget and climate change. The Spinning Enhanced Visible and Infrared Instrument (SEVIRI) on board Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) with its high temporal resolution (15 min), permits a quasi-continuous monitoring of the evolution of cloud properties. This has motivated the adaptation of the SLALOM (SimpLe Approximations for cLOudy Media) algorithm, a semi-analytical cloud property retrieval technique to MSG SEVIRI. The optical properties retrieved by SLALOM are compared against the well known and validated NASA MODIS cloud property product (MODIS 06) as well as the cloud optical depth product (2B-TAU) of CloudSat. The results are shown over the North Atlantic and over the European continent with the intention of determine the relative accuracy between SLALOM and the other retrievals. Over the North Atlantic, SLALOM-based cloud properties retrieved from SEVIRI datasets show a good agreement with the MODIS 06 product with correlation coefficients of 0.93 (?) and 0.82 (aef). The largest deviations were found in less homogeneous cloud areas that are characterized by broken clouds and toward the cloud borders. Moreover, SLALOM optical thickness values are well within the range of corresponding CloudSat 2B-TAU optical thickness values which can be found within a SEVIRI pixel, except for ? < 5 where SLALOM tends to overestimate ?. Despite the different sensor characteristics and viewing geometries, the retrieved cloud properties compare very well. Over Europe, the evaluation between SLALOM and MODIS 06 showed larger differences. We attribute this to (a) uncertainties related to the surface albedo which is treated differently in the algorithms and is based on different albedo maps and (b) inhomogeneities of clouds which exhibit quite complex structures particularly over land. The latter are detected on different scales by MODIS and SEVIRI because of their different spatial resolutions. Given the demonstrated accuracy of SLALOM using MSG SEVIRI data there is a wide spread of potential applications.
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Keywords: |
MODIS |
satellite retrieval |
Cloud properties |
MSG-SEVIRI |
CloudSat |
SLALOM |
Bendix, J.; Dislich, C.; Huth, A.; Huwe, B.; Ließ, M.; Schröder, B.; Thies, B.; Vorpahl, P.; Wagemann, J. & Wilcke, W. (2013): Natural landslides which impact current Regulating Services: Environmental preconditions and modelling. Ecological Studies 221, 153-170.
Günter, S.; Calvas, B.; Lotz, T.; Bendix, J. & Mosandl, R. (2013): Knowledge transfer for conservation and sustainable management of natural resources – a case study from southern Ecuador. Ecological Studies 221, 395-410.
Gerstner, A.O.; Martin, R.; Westermann, S.; Mahnlein, A.; Schmidt, K.; Thies, B. & Laffers, W. (2013): Hyperspectral Imaging in der Kopf-Hals-Onkologie. Laryngo-Rhino-Otologie 92(7), 453-457.
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DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1341512
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Abstract:
Abstract:
Hyperspectral Imaging has long been established in other scientific disciplines than medicine (e.?g. earth science) as a means for objective classification of image data information. Some 10 years ago it was first introduced into medicine. Due to its immanent advantages – non-destructive specimen, compatibility with established optical tools (microscope, endoscope), objectivity, and user-independence – several attempts have been made in order to use its potential for the treatment of cancer patients. This publication reviews which methods have been developed for analogue issues in disciplines other than medicine, how these can be transferred into medicine, and what the perspectives are for the traditional innovative field of head-and-neck-oncology.
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Keywords: |
Hyperspectral imaging |
Kopf-Hals-Onkologie |
Endoskopie |
Mikroskopie |
Klassifikation |
Beck, E.; Bendix, J.; Silva, B.; Rollenbeck, R.; Lehnert, L.; Hamer, U.; Potthast, K.; Tischer, A. & Roos, K. (2013): Future Provisioning Services: Repasturisation of abandoned pastures, problems and pasture management. Ecological Studies 221, 355-372.
Gehrig-Downie, C.; Obregon, A.; Bendix, J. & Gradstein, S.R. (2013): Diversity and vertical distribution of epiphytic liverworts in lowland rain forest and lowland cloud forest of French Guiana. Journal of Bryology 35, 243-254.
Pohle, P.; López Sandoval, M.F.; Beck, E. & Bendix, J. (2013): The role of biodiversity research for the local scientific community. Ecological Studies 221, 411-428.
Richter, M.; Beck, E. & Bendix, J. (2013): The study area. Ecological Studies 221, 3-18.
Windhorst, D.; Silva, B.; Peters, T.; Meyer, H.; Thies, B.; Bendix, J.; Frede, H. & Breuer, L. (2013): Impacts of Local Land-Use Change on Climate and Hydrology. In: Bendix, J., Beck, E., Bräuning, A., Makeschin, F., Mosandl, R., Scheu, S., Wilcke, W. (eds.): Ecosystem Services, Biodiversity and Environmental Change in a Tropical Mountain Ecosystem of South ( ), Springer, Berlin, 307-320.
Bendix, J.; Beck, E.; Bräuning, A.; Makeschin, F.; Mosandl, R.; Scheu, S. & Wilcke, W. 2013: Ecosystem Services, Biodiversity and Environmental Change in a Tropical Mountain Ecosystem of South Ecuador.: Ecological Studies Vol. 221 (Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York).
Beck, E. & Bendix, J. (2013): Towards a sustainable Land Use portfolio. Ecological Studies 221, 355-372.