TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantitative estimation of land cover structure in an arid region across the Israel-Egypt border using remote sensing data
AU - Qin, Z.
AU - Li, W.
AU - Burgheimer, J.
AU - Karnieli, A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by China National Natural Science Foundation projects (No: 30571078 and 40471096). The authors sincerely thank the following people for their assistance: Dr. Heike Schmid, our colleague at the Remote Sensing Laboratory, for helping to access the region for ground truth measurements; Mr. Simon Berkowics, administrator of The Arid Ecosystems Research Center, Inst. of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, for giving us permission to conduct ground truth measurements at the Nizzana Research Site; Dr. Dan Blumberg, Dr. Haim Tsoar, Mr. Gil Revivo, Dr. Robi Stark and Mr. Guy Serbin from Ben Gurion University of the Negev for personal communications about the region.
PY - 2006/7/1
Y1 - 2006/7/1
N2 - The clearly visible border between the Israeli Negev and the Egyptian Sinai in remote sensing imagery is a very interesting phenomenon that has long been studied. The widely accepted explanation to this observation is a viewpoint of anthropogenic impacts on the arid environmental ecosystem across the border. In order to examine the validity of this viewpoint, three methods were employed in this study to determine the quantitative structure of main land cover patterns (biogenic crust, bare sand, vegetation and playa) in the arid region: field observation, measurement on aerial photograph, and analysis of vegetation cover changes on Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and SPOT images. Field observation on the Israeli side indicated that vegetation covers ∼16% of the ground, biogenic crust ∼69%, sand ∼12% and playa 3%. Evidence from aerial photograph supported a sharp contrast of vegetation cover across the border, with ∼17% on the Israeli side and ∼6% on the Egyptian side. Analysis of the available TM/SPOT images indicated a high vibration of seasonal vegetation changes in the region. The Israeli side had a vegetation cover rate ranging from above 18% in the growing season and below 5% in the dry months. The rate on the Egyptian side changes from less than 2% in the dry season to ∼5% in the growing season. Therefore, it is reasonable to estimate surface composition structure of the region as follows: vegetation, biogenic crust, bare sand and playa account for 5-18%, 71-84%, 7.5% and 3.5%, respectively, on the Israeli side, and 2-5%, 12.5%, 79-82% and 3.5% on the Egyptian side, depending on the season. This estimate of land cover structure has been successfully used to model land surface temperature differences across the border, in order to understand arid ecosystem evolution in the region.
AB - The clearly visible border between the Israeli Negev and the Egyptian Sinai in remote sensing imagery is a very interesting phenomenon that has long been studied. The widely accepted explanation to this observation is a viewpoint of anthropogenic impacts on the arid environmental ecosystem across the border. In order to examine the validity of this viewpoint, three methods were employed in this study to determine the quantitative structure of main land cover patterns (biogenic crust, bare sand, vegetation and playa) in the arid region: field observation, measurement on aerial photograph, and analysis of vegetation cover changes on Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and SPOT images. Field observation on the Israeli side indicated that vegetation covers ∼16% of the ground, biogenic crust ∼69%, sand ∼12% and playa 3%. Evidence from aerial photograph supported a sharp contrast of vegetation cover across the border, with ∼17% on the Israeli side and ∼6% on the Egyptian side. Analysis of the available TM/SPOT images indicated a high vibration of seasonal vegetation changes in the region. The Israeli side had a vegetation cover rate ranging from above 18% in the growing season and below 5% in the dry months. The rate on the Egyptian side changes from less than 2% in the dry season to ∼5% in the growing season. Therefore, it is reasonable to estimate surface composition structure of the region as follows: vegetation, biogenic crust, bare sand and playa account for 5-18%, 71-84%, 7.5% and 3.5%, respectively, on the Israeli side, and 2-5%, 12.5%, 79-82% and 3.5% on the Egyptian side, depending on the season. This estimate of land cover structure has been successfully used to model land surface temperature differences across the border, in order to understand arid ecosystem evolution in the region.
KW - Biogenic crust
KW - Landsat TM
KW - SPOT
KW - Sand dune
KW - Surface temperature
KW - Vegetation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33646098652&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2005.11.003
DO - 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2005.11.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33646098652
VL - 66
SP - 336
EP - 352
JO - Journal of Arid Environments
JF - Journal of Arid Environments
SN - 0140-1963
IS - 2
ER -