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Grünflächen stellen einen der wichtigsten Umwelteinflüsse in der Wohnumwelt der Menschen dar. Einerseits wirken sie sich positiv auf die physische und mentale Gesundheit der Menschen aus, andererseits können Grünflächen auch negative Wirkungen anderer Faktoren abmildern, wie beispielsweise die im Laufe des Klimawandels zunehmenden Hitzeereignisse. Dennoch sind Grünflächen nicht für die gesamte Bevölkerung gleichermaßen zugänglich. Bestehende Forschung im Kontext der Umweltgerechtigkeit (UG) konnte bereits aufzeigen, dass unterschiedliche sozio-ökonomische und demographische Gruppen der deutschen Bevölkerung unterschiedlichen Zugriff auf Grünflächen haben. An bestehenden Analysen von Umwelteinflüssen im Kontext der UG wird kritisiert, dass die Auswertung geographischer Daten häufig auf zu stark aggregiertem Level geschieht, wodurch lokal spezifische Expositionen nicht mehr genau abgebildet werden. Dies trifft insbesondere für großflächig angelegte Studien zu. So werden wichtige räumliche Informationen verloren. Doch moderne Erdbeobachtungs- und Geodaten sind so detailliert wie nie und Methoden des maschinellen Lernens ermöglichen die effiziente Verarbeitung zur Ableitung höherwertiger Informationen.
Das übergeordnete Ziel dieser Arbeit besteht darin, am Beispiel von Grünflächen in Deutschland methodische Schritte der systematischen Umwandlung umfassender Geodaten in relevante Geoinformationen für die großflächige und hochaufgelöste Analyse von Umwelteigenschaften aufzuzeigen und durchzuführen. An der Schnittstelle der Disziplinen Fernerkundung, Geoinformatik, Sozialgeographie und Umweltgerechtigkeitsforschung sollen Potenziale moderner Methoden für die Verbesserung der räumlichen und semantischen Auflösung von Geoinformationen erforscht werden. Hierfür werden Methoden des maschinellen Lernens eingesetzt, um Landbedeckung und -nutzung auf nationaler Ebene zu erfassen. Diese Entwicklungen sollen dazu beitragen bestehende Datenlücken zu schließen und Aufschluss über die Verteilungsgerechtigkeit von Grünflächen zu bieten.
Diese Dissertation gliedert sich in drei konzeptionelle Teilschritte. Im ersten Studienteil werden Erdbeobachtungsdaten der Sentinel-2 Satelliten zur deutschlandweiten Klassifikation von Landbedeckungsinformationen verwendet. In Kombination mit punktuellen Referenzdaten der europaweiten Erfassung für Landbedeckungs- und Landnutzungsinformationen des Land Use and Coverage Area Frame Survey (LUCAS) wird ein maschinelles Lernverfahren trainiert. In diesem Kontext werden verschiedene Vorverarbeitungsschritte der LUCAS-Daten und deren Einfluss auf die Klassifikationsgenauigkeit beleuchtet. Das Klassifikationsverfahren ist in der Lage Landbedeckungsinformationen auch in komplexen urbanen Gebieten mit hoher Genauigkeit abzuleiten. Ein Ergebnis des Studienteils ist eine deutschlandweite Landbedeckungsklassifikation mit einer Gesamtgenauigkeit von 93,07 %, welche im weiteren Verlauf der Arbeit genutzt wird, um grüne Landbedeckung (GLC) räumlich zu quantifizieren.
Im zweiten konzeptionellen Teil der Arbeit steht die differenzierte Betrachtung von Grünflächen anhand des Beispiels öffentlicher Grünflächen (PGS), die häufig Gegenstand der UG-Forschung ist, im Vordergrund. Doch eine häufig verwendete Quelle für räumliche Daten zu öffentlichen Grünflächen, der European Urban Atlas (EUA), wird bisher nicht flächendeckend für Deutschland erhoben. Dieser Studienteil verfolgt einen datengetriebenen Ansatz, die Verfügbarkeit von öffentlichem Grün auf der räumlichen Ebene von Nachbarschaften für ganz Deutschland zu ermitteln. Hierfür dienen bereits vom EUA erfasste Gebiete als Referenz. Mithilfe einer Kombination von Erdbeobachtungsdaten und Informationen aus dem OpenStreetMap-Projekt wird ein Deep Learning -basiertes Fusionsnetzwerk erstellt, welche die verfügbare Fläche von öffentlichem Grün quantifiziert. Das Ergebnis dieses Schrittes ist ein Modell, welches genutzt wird, um die Menge öffentlicher Grünflächen in der Nachbarschaft zu schätzen (𝑅 2 = 0.952).
Der dritte Studienteil greift die Ergebnisse der ersten beiden Studienteile auf und betrachtet die Verteilung von Grünflächen in Deutschland unter Hinzunahme von georeferenzierten Bevölkerungsdaten. Diese exemplarische Analyse unterscheidet dabei Grünflächen nach zwei Typen: GLC und PGS. Zunächst wird mithilfe deskriptiver Statistiken die generelle Grünflächenverteilung in der Bevölkerung Deutschlands beleuchtet. Daraufhin wird die Verteilungsgerechtigkeit anhand gängiger Gerechtigkeitsmetriken bestimmt. Abschließend werden die Zusammenhänge zwischen der demographischen Komposition der Nachbarschaft und der verfügbaren Menge von Grünflächen anhand dreier exemplarischer soziodemographischer Gesellschaftsgruppen untersucht. Die Analyse zeigt starke Unterschiede der Verfügbarkeit von PGS zwischen städtischen und ländlichen Gebieten. Ein höherer Prozentsatz der Stadtbevölkerung hat Zugriff das Mindestmaß von PGS gemessen an der Vorgabe der Weltgesundheitsorganisation. Die Ergebnisse zeigen auch einen deutlichen Unterschied bezüglich der Verteilungsgerechtigkeit zwischen GLC und PGS und verdeutlichen die Relevanz der Unterscheidung von Grünflächentypen für derartige
Untersuchungen. Die abschließende Betrachtung verschiedener Bevölkerungsgruppen arbeitet Unterschiede auf soziodemographischer Ebene auf.
In der Zusammenschau demonstriert diese Arbeit wie moderne Geodaten und Methoden des maschinellen Lernens genutzt werden können bisherige Limitierungen räumlicher Datensätze zu überwinden. Am Beispiel von Grünflächen in der Wohnumgebung der Bevölkerung Deutschlands wird gezeigt, dass landesweite Analysen zur Umweltgerechtigkeit durch hochaufgelöste und lokal feingliedrige geographische Informationen bereichert werden können. Diese Arbeit verdeutlicht, wie die Methoden der Erdbeobachtung und Geoinformatik einen wichtigen Beitrag leisten können, die Ungleichheit der Wohnumwelt der Menschen zu identifizieren und schlussendlich den nachhaltigen Siedlungsbau in Form von objektiven Informationen zu unterstützen und überwachen.
Die Bewässerungslandwirtschaft in Mittelasien ist geprägt von schwerwiegenden ökologischen und ökonomischen Problemen. Zur Verbesserung der Situation auf dem hydrologischen Sektor wird daher seitens der mittelasiatischen Interstate Commission for Water Coordination (ICWC) die Einführung des Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) gefordert. Wichtige Herausforderungen zur Optimierung der Wassernutzung im Aralsee-Becken sind dabei die Schaffung von Transparenz sowie von Möglichkeiten zur Überwachung der Landnutzung und der Wasserentnahme in den Bewässerungssystemen. Im Detail fokussierte diese Arbeit auf das Bewässerungssystem der Region Khorezm im Unterlauf des Amu Darya südlich des Aralsees. Die Arbeit zielte darauf ab, (1) objektive und konsistente Datengrundlagen zum Monitoring der Landnutzung und des Wasserverbrauchs innerhalb des Bewässerungslandes zu schaffen und (2) auf Basis dieser Ergebnisse die Funktionsweise des Bewässerungssystems zu verstehen sowie die Land- und Wassernutzung der Region zu bewerten. Um diese Ziele zu erreichen, wurden Methoden der Fernerkundung und der Hydrologie miteinander kombiniert. Fernerkundliche Schlüsselgrößen der Arbeit waren die Kartierung der agrarischen Landnutzung und die Modellierung der saisonalen tatsächlichen Evapotranspiration. Es wurde eine Methode vorgestellt, die eine Unterscheidung verschiedener Landnutzungen und Fruchtfolgen der Region durch die temporale Segmentierung von Zeitserien aus 8-tägigen Kompositen von 250 m-Daten des MODIS-Sensors ermöglicht. Durch die mehrfache Anwendung von Recursive Partitioning And Regression Trees auf deskriptive Statistiken von Zeitseriensegmenten konnte eine hohe Stabilität erzielt werden (overall accuracy: 91 %, Kappa-Koeffizient: 0,9). Täglich von MODIS aufgezeichnete Landoberflächentemperaturen (LST) bildeten die Basis zur fernerkundungsbasierten Modellierung der saisonalen tatsächlichen Evapotranspiration (ETact) für die sommerliche Vegetationsperiode. Aufgrund der hohen zeitlichen und groben räumlichen Auflösung der verwendeten MODIS-Daten von 1 km waren leichte Modifikationen des zur Modellierung eingesetzten Surface Energy Balance Algortihm for Land (SEBAL) erforderlich. Zur Modellierung von ETact wurden MODIS-Produkte (LST, Emissionsgrad, Albedo, NDVI und Blattflächenindex) und meteorologische Stationsdaten aus Khorezm verwendet. Die Modellierung des fühlbaren Wärmeflusses, einer Komponente der Energiebilanzgleichung an der Erdoberfläche, erfolgte mittels METRIC (High Resolution and Internalized Calibration), einer Variante des SEBAL. Die Landnutzungsklassifikation fungierte als zentraler Eingangsparameter, um eine automatisierte Auswahl der Ankerpunkte des Models sicherzustellen. Da innerhalb der MODIS-Auflösung aufgrund der Mischpixelproblematik keine homogen feuchten oder trockenen Bedingungen im Bewässerungsgebiet gefunden werden konnten, wurden die Landnutzungsklassifikation, der NDVI und die ASCE-Referenz-Evapotranspiration zur Abschätzung des tatsächlichen Zustands an den Ankerpunkten herangezogen. Weiterhin wurden umfassende Geländemessungen durchgeführt, um in der Vegetationsperiode 2005 die Zu- und Abflussmengen des Wasser von und nach Khorezm zu bestimmen. Die abschließende Bewertung der Land- und Wassernutzung basierte letztendlich auf der Bildung von Wasserbilanzen und der Berechnung anerkannter Performanceindikatoren wie der Ratio aus Drainage und Wasserentnahme oder der depleted fraction. Für die landwirtschaftliche Nutzung im Rayon Khorezm wurde für die Sommersaison 2005 eine Wasserentnahme von 5,38 km3 ermittelt. Damit übertrafen die Messergebnisse die offiziell verfügbaren Daten der ICWC um durchschnittlich 37 %. Auf die landwirtschaftliche Fläche bezogen ergab sich für Khorezm im Jahr 2005 eine mittlere Wasserentnahme von 22.782 m3/ha. In den Subsystemen schwankten diese Werte zwischen 17.000 m3/ha und 30.000 m3/ha. Allerdings konnte an den Systemgrenzen, an denen die Messungen durchgeführt werden, der aus den fernerkundungsbasierten Modellierungen auf WUA-Level erwartete abnehmende Gradient der Wasserentnahme zwischen Oberlauf und Unterlauf nicht nachvollzogen werden. Als Ursache für diese Diskrepanz sind vor allem die Versickerungsverluste im Kanalsystem zu nennen, die den Grundwasserkörper großräumig auffüllen und auf Feldebene nicht zur oberflächlichen Bewässerung zur Verfügung stehen. Monatliche Bilanzierungen und die Analyse der Performanceindikatoren führten zu denselben Ergebnissen. In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich mit Methoden der Fernerkundung objektive und konsistente Daten der agrarischen Landnutzung und des Wasserverbrauchs für ein regionales Monitoring erstellen lassen. Da in den benachbarten Regionen gleiche atmosphärische Bedingungen und ähnliche Anbausorten anzutreffen sind, ist anzunehmen, dass beide Verfahren auch auf der Planungsebene in einem IWRM für die übrigen Mittel- und Unterläufe von Amu Darya und Syr Darya ein hohes Anwendungspotenzial besitzen.
Interactions between different formative processes are reflected in the internal structure of rock glaciers. Therefore, the detection of subsurface conditions can help to enhance our understanding of landform development. For an assessment of subsurface conditions, we present an analysis of the spatial variability of active layer thickness, ground ice content and frost table topography for two different rock glaciers in the Eastern Swiss Alps by means of quasi-3-D electrical resistivity imaging (ERI). This approach enables an extensive mapping of subsurface structures and a spatial overlay between site-specific surface and subsurface characteristics. At Nair rock glacier, we discovered a gradual descent of the frost table in a downslope direction and a constant decrease of ice content which follows the observed surface topography. This is attributed to ice formation by refreezing meltwater from an embedded snow bank or from a subsurface ice patch which reshapes the permafrost layer. The heterogeneous ground ice distribution at Uertsch rock glacier indicates that multiple processes on different time domains were involved in the development. Resistivity values which represent frozen conditions vary within a wide range and indicate a successive formation which includes several advances, past glacial overrides and creep processes on the rock glacier surface. In combination with the observed topography, quasi-3-D ERI enables us to delimit areas of extensive and compressive flow in close proximity. Excellent data quality was provided by a good coupling of electrodes to the ground in the pebbly material of the investigated rock glaciers. Results show the value of the quasi-3-D ERI approach but advise the application of complementary geophysical methods for interpreting the results.
Mapping Bushfire Distribution and Burn Severity in West Africa Using Remote Sensing Observations
(2010)
Fire has long been considered to be the main ecological factor explaining the origin and maintenance of West African savannas. It has a very high occurrence in these savannas due to high human pressure caused by strong demographic growth and, concomitantly, is used to transform natural savannas into farmland and is also used as a provider of energy. This study was carried out with the support of the BIOTA project funded by the German ministry for Research and Education. The objective of this study is to establish the spatial and temporal distribution of bushfires during a long observation period from 2000 to 2009 as well as to assess fire impact on vegetation through mapping of the burn severity; based on remote sensing and field data collections. Remote sensing was used for this study because of the advantages that it offers in collecting data for long time periods and on different scales. In this case, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite instrument at 1km resolution is used to assess active fires, and understand the seasonality of fire, its occurrence and its frequency within the vegetation types on a regional scale. Landsat ETM+ imagery at 30 m and field data collections were used to define the characteristics of burn severity related to the biomass loss on a local scale. At a regional scale, the occurrence of fires and rainfall per month correlated very well (R2 = 0.951, r = -0.878, P < 0.01), which shows that the lower the amount of rainfall, the higher the fire occurrence and vice versa. In the dry season, four fire seasons were determined on a regional scale, namely very early fires, which announce the beginning of the fires, early and late fires making up the peak of fire in December/January and very late fires showing the end of the fire season and the beginning of the rainy season. Considerable fire activity was shown to take place in the vegetation zones between the Forest and the Sahel areas. Within these zones, parts of the Sudano-Guinean and the Guinean zones showed a high pixel frequency, i.e. fires occurred in the same place in many years. This high pixel frequency was also found in most protected areas in these zones. As to the kinds of land cover affected by fire, the highest fire occurrence is observed within the Deciduous woodlands and Deciduous shrublands. Concerning the burn severity, which was observed at a local scale, field data correlated closely with the ΔNBR derived from Landsat scenes of Pendjari National Park (R2 = 0.76). The correlation coefficient according to Pearson is r = 0.84 and according to Spearman-Rho, the correlation coefficient is r = 0.86. Very low and low burn severity (with ΔNBR value from 0 to 0.40) affected the vegetation weakly (0-35 percent of biomass loss) whereas moderate and high burn severity greatly affected the vegetation, leading to up to 100 percent of biomass loss, with the ΔNBR value ranging from 0.41 to 0.99. It can be seen from these results that remotely sensed images offer a tool to determine the fire distribution over large regions in savannas and that the Normalised Burn Ratio index can be applied to West Africa savannas. The outcomes of this thesis will hopefully contribute to understanding and, eventually, improving fire regimes in West Africa and their response to climate change and changes in vegetation diversity.
Glacier outlines during the ‘Little Ice Age’ maximum in Jotunheimen were mapped by using remote sensing techniques (vertical aerial photos and satellite imagery), glacier outlines from the 1980s and 2003, a digital terrain model (DTM), geomorphological maps of individual glaciers, and field-GPS measurements. The related inventory data (surface area, minimum and maximum altitude) and several other variables (e.g. slope, range) were calculated automatically by using a geographical information system. The length of the glacier flowline was mapped manually based on the glacier outlines at the maximum of the ‘Little Ice Age’ and the DTM. The glacier data during the maximum of the ‘Little Ice Age’ were compared with the Norwegian glacier inventory of 2003. Based on the glacier inventories during the maximum of the ‘Little Ice Age’, the 1980s and 2003, a simple parameterization after HAEBERLI & HOELZLE (1995) was performed to estimate unmeasured glacier variables, as e.g. surface velocity or mean net mass balance. Input data were composed of surface glacier area, minimum and maximum elevation, and glacier length. The results of the parameterization were compared with the results of previous parameterizations in the European Alps and the Southern Alps of New Zealand (HAEBERLI & HOELZLE 1995; HOELZLE et al. 2007). A relationship between these results of the inventories and of the parameterization and climate and climate changes was made.
Burn severity was measured within the Mediterranean sclerophyll forests of south-west Western Australia (WA) using remote sensing data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The region of south-west WA is considered as a high fire prone landscape and is managed by the state government’s Department of Conservation and Land Management (CALM). Prescribed fuel reduction burning is used as a management tool in this region. The measurement of burn severity with remote sensing data focused on monitoring the success and impact of prescribed burning and wildfire in this environment. The high temporal resolution of MODIS with twice daily overpasses in this area was considered highly favourable, as opportunities for prescribed burning are temporally limited by climatic conditions. The Normalised Burn Ratio (NBR) was investigated to measure burn severity in the forested area of south-west WA. This index has its heritage based on data from the Landsat TM/ETM+ sensors (Key and Benson, 1999 [1],[2]) and was transferred from Landsat to MODIS data. The measurement principally addresses the biomass consumption due to fire, whereas the change detected between the pre-fire image and the post-fire image is quantified by the ÄNBR. The NBR and the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) have been applied to MODIS and Landsat TM/ETM+ data. The spectral properties and the index values of the remote sensing data have been analysed within different burnt areas. The influence of atmospheric and BRDF effects on MODIS data has been investigated by comparing uncorrected top of atmosphere reflectance and atmospheric and BRDF corrected reflectance. The definition of burn severity classes has been established in a field trip to the study area. However, heterogeneous fire behaviour and patchy distribution of different vegetation structure made field classification difficult. Ground truth data has been collected in two different types of vegetation structure present in the burnt area. The burn severity measurement of high resolution Landsat data was assessed based on ground truth data. However, field data was not sufficient for rigorous validation of remote sensing data. The NBR index images of both sensors have been calibrated based on training areas in the high resolution Landsat image. The burn severity classifications of both sensors are comparable, which demonstrates the feasibility of a burn severity measurement using moderate spatial resolution 250m MODIS data. The normalisation through index calculation reduced atmospheric and BRDF effects, and thus MODIS top of at-mosphere data has been considered suitable for the burn severity measurement. The NBR could not be uniformly applied, as different structures of vegetation influenced the range of index values. Furthermore, the index was sensitive to variability in moisture content. However, the study concluded that the NBR on MODIS data is a useful measure of burn severity in the forested area of south-west WA.
Increasing urbanisation is one of the biggest pressures to vegetation in the City of Cape Town. The growth of the city dramatically reduced the area under indigenous Fynbos vegetation, which remains in isolated fragments. These are subject to a number of threats including atmospheric deposition, atypical fire cycles and invasion by exotic plant and animal species. Especially the Port Jackson willow (Acacia saligna) extensively suppresses the indigenous Fynbos vegetation with its rapid growth.
The main objective of this study was to investigate indicators for a quick and early prediction of the health of the remaining Fynbos fragments in the City of Cape Town with help of remote sensing.
First, the productivity of the vegetation in response to rainfall was determined. For this purpose, the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), derived from Terra MODIS data with a spatial resolution of 250m, and precipitation data of 19 rainfall stations for the period from 2000 till 2008 were used. Within the scope of a flexible regression between the EVI data and the precipitation data, different lags of the vegetation response to rainfall were analysed. Furthermore, residual trends (RESTREND) were calculated, which result from the difference between observed EVI and the one predicted by precipitation. Negative trends may suggest a degradation of the habitats. In addition, the so-called Rain-use Efficiency (RUE) was tested in this context. It is defined as the ratio between net primary production (NPP) – represented by the annual sum of EVI – and the annual rainfall sum. These indicators were analysed for their suitability to determine the health of the indigenous Fynbos vegetation.
Furthermore, the degree of dispersal of invasive species especially the Acacia saligna was investigated. With the specific characteristics of the tested indicators and the spectral signature of Acacia saligna, i.e. its unique reflectance over the course of the year, the dispersal was estimated. Since the growth of invasive species dramatically reduces the biodiversity of the fragments, their presence is an important factor for the condition of ecosystem health.
This work focused on 11 test sites with an average size of 200ha, distributed over the whole area of the City of Cape Town. Five of these fragments are under conservation and the others shall be protected in the near future, too, which makes them of special interest. In January 2010, fieldwork was undertaken in order to investigate the state and composition of the local vegetation.
The results show promising indicators for the assessment of ecosystem health. The coefficients of determination of the EVI-rainfall regression for Fynbos are minor, because the reaction of this vegetation type to rainfall is considerably lower than the one of the invasive species. Thus, a good distinction between indigenous and alien vegetation is possible on the basis of this regression. On the other hand, the RESTREND method, for which the regression forms the basis, is only of limited use, since the significance of these trends is not given for Fynbos vegetation. Furthermore, the RUE has considerable potential for the assessment of ecosystem health in the study area. The Port Jackson willow has an explicitly higher EVI than the Fynbos vegetation and thus its RUE is more efficient for a similar amount of rainfall. However, it has to be used with caution, because local and temporal variability cannot be extinguished in the study area over the rather short MODIS time series.
These results display that the interpretation of the indicators has to be conducted differently from the literature, because the element of invasive species was not considered in most of the previous papers. An increase in productivity is not necessarily equivalent with an improvement in health of the fragment, but can indicate a dispersal of Acacia saligna. This shows the general problem of the term ‘degradation’ which in most publications so far is only measured by productivity and other factors like invasive species are disregarded.
On the basis of the EVI-rainfall regression and statistical measures of the EVI, the distribution of invasive species could be delineated. Generally, a strong invasion of the Port Jackson willow was discovered on the test sites. The results display that a reasoned and sustainable management of the fragments is essential in order to prevent the suppression of the indigenous Fynbos vegetation by Acacia saligna. For this purpose, remote sensing can give an indication which areas changed so that specific field surveys can be undertaken and subsequent management measures can be determined.
The investigation of the Earth system and interplays between its components is of utmost importance to enhance the understanding of the impacts of global climate change on the Earth's land surface. In this context, Earth observation (EO) provides valuable long-term records covering an abundance of land surface variables and, thus, allowing for large-scale analyses to quantify and analyze land surface dynamics across various Earth system components. In view of this, the geographical entity of river basins was identified as particularly suitable for multivariate time series analyses of the land surface, as they naturally cover diverse spheres of the Earth. Many remote sensing missions with different characteristics are available to monitor and characterize the land surface. Yet, only a few spaceborne remote sensing missions enable the generation of spatio-temporally consistent time series with equidistant observations over large areas, such as the MODIS instrument.
In order to summarize available remote sensing-based analyses of land surface dynamics in large river basins, a detailed literature review of 287 studies was performed and several research gaps were identified. In this regard, it was found that studies rarely analyzed an entire river basin, but rather focused on study areas at subbasin or regional scale. In addition, it was found that transboundary river basins remained understudied and that studies largely focused on selected riparian countries. Moreover, the analysis of environmental change was generally conducted using a single EO-based land surface variable, whereas a joint exploration of multivariate land surface variables across spheres was found to be rarely performed.
To address these research gaps, a methodological framework enabling (1) the preprocessing and harmonization of multi-source time series as well as (2) the statistical analysis of a multivariate feature space was required. For development and testing of a methodological framework that is transferable in space and time, the transboundary river basins Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna (IGBM) in South Asia were selected as study area, having a size equivalent to around eight times the size of Germany. These basins largely depend on water resources from monsoon rainfall and High Mountain Asia which holds the largest ice mass outside the polar regions. In total, over 1.1 billion people live in this region and in parts largely depend on these water resources which are indispensable for the world's largest connected irrigated croplands and further domestic needs as well. With highly heterogeneous geographical settings, these river basins allow for a detailed analysis of the interplays between multiple spheres, including the anthroposphere, biosphere, cryosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and atmosphere.
In this thesis, land surface dynamics over the last two decades (December 2002 - November 2020) were analyzed using EO time series on vegetation condition, surface water area, and snow cover area being based on MODIS imagery, the DLR Global WaterPack and JRC Global Surface Water Layer, as well as the DLR Global SnowPack, respectively. These data were evaluated in combination with further climatic, hydrological, and anthropogenic variables to estimate their influence on the three EO land surface variables. The preprocessing and harmonization of the time series was conducted using the implemented framework. The resulting harmonized feature space was used to quantify and analyze land surface dynamics by means of several statistical time series analysis techniques which were integrated into the framework. In detail, these methods involved (1) the calculation of trends using the Mann-Kendall test in association with the Theil-Sen slope estimator, (2) the estimation of changes in phenological metrics using the Timesat tool, (3) the evaluation of driving variables using the causal discovery approach Peter and Clark Momentary Conditional Independence (PCMCI), and (4) additional correlation tests to analyze the human influence on vegetation condition and surface water area.
These analyses were performed at annual and seasonal temporal scale and for diverse spatial units, including grids, river basins and subbasins, land cover and land use classes, as well as elevation-dependent zones. The trend analyses of vegetation condition mostly revealed significant positive trends. Irrigated and rainfed croplands were found to contribute most to these trends. The trend magnitudes were particularly high in arid and semi-arid regions. Considering surface water area, significant positive trends were obtained at annual scale. At grid scale, regional and seasonal clusters with significant negative trends were found as well. Trends for snow cover area mostly remained stable at annual scale, but significant negative trends were observed in parts of the river basins during distinct seasons. Negative trends were also found for the elevation-dependent zones, particularly at high altitudes. Also, retreats in the seasonal duration of snow cover area were found in parts of the river basins. Furthermore, for the first time, the application of the causal discovery algorithm on a multivariate feature space at seasonal temporal scale revealed direct and indirect links between EO land surface variables and respective drivers. In general, vegetation was constrained by water availability, surface water area was largely influenced by river discharge and indirectly by precipitation, and snow cover area was largely controlled by precipitation and temperature with spatial and temporal variations. Additional analyses pointed towards positive human influences on increasing trends in vegetation greenness. The investigation of trends and interplays across spheres provided new and valuable insights into the past state and the evolution of the land surface as well as on relevant climatic and hydrological driving variables. Besides the investigated river basins in South Asia, these findings are of great value also for other river basins and geographical regions.
Current changes of biodiversity result almost exclusively from human activities. This anthropogenic conversion of natural ecosystems during the last decades has led to the so-called ‘biodiversity crisis’, which comprises the loss of species as well as changes in the global distribution patterns of organisms. Species richness is unevenly distributed worldwide. Altogether, 17 so-called ‘megadiverse’ nations cover less than 10% of the earth’s land surface but support nearly 70% of global species richness. Mexico, the study area of this thesis, is one of those countries. However, due to Mexico’s large extent and geographical complexity, it is impossible to conduct reliable and spatially explicit assessments of species distribution ranges based on these collection data and field work alone. In the last two decades, Species distribution models (SDMs) have been established as important tools for extrapolating such in situ observations. SDMs analyze empirical correlations between geo-referenced species occurrence data and environmental variables to obtain spatially explicit surfaces indicating the probability of species occurrence. Remote sensing can provide such variables which describe biophysical land surface characteristics with high effective spatial resolutions. Especially during the last three to five years, the number of studies making use of remote sensing data for modeling species distributions has therefore multiplied. Due to the novelty of this field of research, the published literature consists mostly of selective case studies. A systematic framework for modeling species distributions by means of remote sensing is still missing. This research gap was taken up by this thesis and specific studies were designed which addressed the combination of climate and remote sensing data in SDMs, the suitability of continuous remote sensing variables in comparison with categorical land cover classification data, the criteria for selecting appropriate remote sensing data depending on species characteristics, and the effects of inter-annual variability in remotely sensed time series on the performance of species distribution models. The corresponding novel analyses were conducted with the Maximum Entropy algorithm developed by Phillips et al. (2004). In this thesis, a more comprehensive set of remote sensing predictors than in the existing literature was utilized for species distribution modeling. The products were selected based on their ecological relevance for characterizing species distributions. Two 1 km Terra-MODIS Land 16-day composite standard products including the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), Reflectance Data, and Land Surface Temperature (LST) were assembled into enhanced time series for the time period of 2001 to 2009. These high-dimensional time series data were then transformed into 18 phenological and 35 statistical metrics that were selected based on an extensive literature review. Spatial distributions of twelve tree species were modeled in a hierarchical framework which integrated climate (WorldClim) and MODIS remote sensing data. The species are representative of the major Mexican forest types and cover a variety of ecological traits, such as range size and biotope specificity. Trees were selected because they have a high probability of detection in the field and since mapping vegetation has a long tradition in remote sensing. The result of this thesis showed that the integration of remote sensing data into species distribution models has a significant potential for improving and both spatial detail and accuracy of the model predictions.
Remote sensing for disease risk profiling: a spatial analysis of schistosomiasis in West Africa
(2014)
Global environmental change leads to the emergence of new human health risks. As a consequence, transmission opportunities of environment-related diseases are transformed and human infection with new emerging pathogens increase. The main motivation for this study is the considerable demand for disease surveillance and monitoring in relation to dynamic environmental drivers. Remote sensing (RS) data belong to the key data sources for environmental modelling due to their capabilities to deliver spatially continuous information repeatedly for large areas with an ecologically adequate spatial resolution.
A major research gap as identified by this study is the disregard of the spatial mismatch inherent in current modelling approaches of profiling disease risk using remote sensing data. Typically, epidemiological data are aggregated at school or village level. However, these point data do neither represent the spatial distribution of habitats, where disease-related species find their suitable environmental conditions, nor the place, where infection has occurred. As a consequence, the prevalence data and remotely sensed environmental variables, which aim to characterise the habitat of disease-related species, are spatially disjunct.
The main objective of this study is to improve RS-based disease risk models by incorporating the ecological and spatial context of disease transmission. Exemplified by the analysis of the human schistosomiasis disease in West Africa, this objective includes the quantification of the impact of scales and ecological regions on model performance.
In this study, the conditions that modify the transmission of schistosomiasis are reviewed in detail. A conceptual underpinning of the linkages between geographical RS measures, disease transmission ecology, and epidemiological survey data is developed. During a field-based analysis, environmental suitability for schistosomiasis transmission was assessed on the ground, which is then quantified by a habitat suitability index (HSI) and applied to RS data. This conceptual model of environmental suitability is refined by the development of a hierarchical model approach that statistically links school-based disease prevalence with the ecologically relevant measurements of RS data. The statistical models of schistosomiasis risk are derived from two different algorithms; the Random Forest and the partial least squares regression (PLSR). Scale impact is analysed based on different spatial resolutions of RS data. Furthermore, varying buffer extents are analysed around school-based measurements. Three distinctive sites of Burkina Faso and Côte d’Ivoire are specifically modelled to represent a gradient of ecozones from dry savannah to tropical rainforest including flat and mountainous regions.
The model results reveal the applicability of RS data to spatially delineate and quantitatively evaluate environmental suitability for the transmission of schistosomiasis. In specific, the multi-temporal derivation of water bodies and the assessment of their riparian vegetation coverage based on high-resolution RapidEye and Landsat data proofed relevant. In contrast, elevation data and water surface temperature are constraint in their ability to characterise habitat conditions for disease-related parasites and freshwater snail species. With increasing buffer extent observed around the school location, the performance of statistical models increases, improving the prediction of transmission risk. The most important RS variables identified to model schistosomiasis risk are the measure of distance to water bodies, topographic variables, and land surface temperature (LST). However, each ecological region requires a different set of RS variables to optimise the modelling of schistosomiasis risk. A key result of the hierarchical model approach is its superior performance to explain the spatial risk of schistosomiasis.
Overall, this study stresses the key importance of considering the ecological and spatial context for disease risk profiling and demonstrates the potential of RS data. The methodological approach of this study contributes substantially to provide more accurate and relevant geoinformation, which supports an efficient planning and decision-making within the public health sector.