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Mangrove damage along northern Gulf of Mexico from extreme freeze event on February 2021

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U.S. Geological Survey2023-01-01 更新2026-04-23 收录
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https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/6466a744d34ec11ae4a7d9ff
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资源简介:
Climate change is altering the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. Quantifying ecosystem responses to extreme events at the landscape scale is critical for understanding and responding to climate-driven change but is constrained by limited data availability. Here, we integrated remote sensing with ground-based observations to quantify landscape-scale vegetation damage from an extreme climatic event. We used ground- and satellite-based black mangrove (Avicennia germinans) leaf damage data from the northern Gulf of Mexico (USA and Mexico) to examine the effects of an extreme freeze in a region where black mangroves are expanding their range. The February 2021 event produced coastal temperatures as low as -10 ? in some areas, exceeding thresholds for A. germinans damage and mortality. We used Sentinel-2 surface reflectance data to assess vegetation greenness before and after the freeze, along with ground-based observations of A. germinans leaf damage.
提供机构:
United States Geological Survey; Fort Collins Science Center; U.S. Geological Survey
创建时间:
2023-01-01
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