Mountain plants are considered among the species most vulnerable to climate change, especially at high latitudes where there is little potential for poleward or uphill dispersal. Satellite monitoring can reveal spatiotemporal variation in vegetation activity, offering a largely unexploited potential for studying responses of montane ecosystems to temperature and predicting phenological shifts driven by climate change. Here, a novel remote-sensing phenology approach is developed that advances existing techniques by considering variation in vegetation activity across the whole year, rather than just focusing on event dates (e.g. start and end of season). Time series of two vegetation indices (VI), normalized difference VI (NDVI) and enhanced ...
Satellite remote sensing of plant phenology provides an important indicator of climate change. Howev...
Rapid temperature increase and its impacts on alpine ecosystems in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, the ...
Plant species have responded to recent increases in global temperatures by shifting their geographic...
Mountain plants are considered among the species most vulnerable to climate change, especially at hi...
Recent climate warming has altered plant phenology at northern European latitudes, but conclusions r...
The role of temperature as a key driver for plant phenology is well established. However, an increas...
Mountain ecosystems are sensitive to climate change, and vegetation phenology provides one of the be...
In mountain forest ecosystems where elevation gradients are prominent, temperature gradient-based ph...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
Arctic temperatures have increased at almost twice the global average rate since the industrial revo...
Spring vegetation phenology in temperate and cold regions is widely expected to advance with increas...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
In recent decades, satellite-derived start of vegetation growing season (SOS) has advanced in many n...
Satellite remote sensing of plant phenology provides an important indicator of climate change. Howev...
Monitoring the inter-annual variability of phenology under varying site conditions in mountain areas...
Satellite remote sensing of plant phenology provides an important indicator of climate change. Howev...
Rapid temperature increase and its impacts on alpine ecosystems in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, the ...
Plant species have responded to recent increases in global temperatures by shifting their geographic...
Mountain plants are considered among the species most vulnerable to climate change, especially at hi...
Recent climate warming has altered plant phenology at northern European latitudes, but conclusions r...
The role of temperature as a key driver for plant phenology is well established. However, an increas...
Mountain ecosystems are sensitive to climate change, and vegetation phenology provides one of the be...
In mountain forest ecosystems where elevation gradients are prominent, temperature gradient-based ph...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
Arctic temperatures have increased at almost twice the global average rate since the industrial revo...
Spring vegetation phenology in temperate and cold regions is widely expected to advance with increas...
In alpine habitats, predicted warmer and longer growing seasons will influence plant phenology, with...
In recent decades, satellite-derived start of vegetation growing season (SOS) has advanced in many n...
Satellite remote sensing of plant phenology provides an important indicator of climate change. Howev...
Monitoring the inter-annual variability of phenology under varying site conditions in mountain areas...
Satellite remote sensing of plant phenology provides an important indicator of climate change. Howev...
Rapid temperature increase and its impacts on alpine ecosystems in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, the ...
Plant species have responded to recent increases in global temperatures by shifting their geographic...