Estimating the ecological status and change of riparian zones in Andalusia assessed by multi-temporal AVHHR datasets

TitleEstimating the ecological status and change of riparian zones in Andalusia assessed by multi-temporal AVHHR datasets
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsIvits, E., Cherlet M., Mehl W., & Sommer S.
JournalEcological Indicators
Volume9
Pagination422-431
Keywordsagricultural extensification, changing ecological status, Phenological indicator, Remote sensing, riparian buffer stripe
Abstract

Following the European Commission’s Water Framework Directive all surface waters in EU’s Member States must reach a good status by 2015. The evaluation of this status will be partly based on ecological criteria, such as the hydro-morphological quality criteria which also evaluate the structure and condition of the riparian zone. Riparian zones with undisturbed or nearly undisturbed condition are given high-ecological status. The agri-environmental measures in the EU promote an extensive use of land to protect the farmed environment and its biodiversity. Recent studies in Andalusia and elsewhere suggest that extensification leads to riparian zones with higher ecological status compared to intensively used areas. We suggest that extensification and thus better ecological status of the riparian zone can be partly approximated by the amount of vegetation permanently present on the area. For this the so-called permanent vegetation fraction was derived from a multi-temporal advanced very high-resolution radiometer (AVHRR) dataset and was used (1) to classify the ecological status of the riparian zone into two classes, favourable and unfavourable, and (2) to assess the effect of agricultural practices on these areas. The classification was validated by field observations in the Guadalquivir river basin while detailed information on farming practices helped to assess the effect of agriculture on the riparian zone. The assessment was carried out in olive land cover because erosion control in olive cultivations is the most widely implemented measure in Andalusia. Results suggest that the remotely sensed permanent vegetation fraction is a good indicator of the favourable and unfavourable ecological status of the riparian zone. Furthermore, extensification of agricultural practices expressed in terms of increasing permanent vegetation cover was shown to have positive effect on the riparian zone as opposed to areas where no measures were implemented