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Forest Structure and Distribution across the Geographic Range of the Giant Panda Up-scaling from Plots to the Entire Region. Jianguo (Jack) Liu (Michigan State University) Zhiyun Ouyang (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Jiaguo Qi (Michigan State University) Andrés Viña (Michigan State University).
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Forest Structure and Distribution across the Geographic Range of the Giant PandaUp-scaling from Plots to the Entire Region Jianguo (Jack) Liu (Michigan State University) Zhiyun Ouyang (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Jiaguo Qi (Michigan State University) Andrés Viña (Michigan State University)
Giant Panda’s Geographic Range Historical Range Current Range
Giant Panda Habitat • Altitudinal range between 1200-3800 m • <45o slopes • Require forest cover (deciduous & coniferous) • >95% of diet is composed of bamboo
Remote Sensing for Panda Habitat Assessment • Limited to provide information on forest cover (usually through non-hierarchical spectral classification algorithms) • Understory bamboo cover has been neglected due to the difficulty in isolating it from forest canopy
Objectives • Assess the spatial distribution of forests • Evaluate the structural characteristics of the forests at plot scales • Develop techniques for up-scaling from plots to nature reserves, mountain regions and to the entire panda geographic range
Field Data • 440 sampling plots: • Forest cover/type • Elevation, slope, aspect • Tree/bamboo stem density & basal area • Tree/bamboo species composition • 84 plots exhibited panda signs
Forest Cover & Panda Habitat Qionglai Mountain Region Landsat TM + SRTM-DEM
Conservation Plans at Regional Scales Qionglai Mountain Region Establishment of key (K) areas to locate new nature reserves and linkage (L) areas to connect different nature reserves Xu, et al. 2006. Diversity and Distributions 12: 610-619.
What about information on bamboo distribution ? Hypothesis: Forests with bamboo have particular phenological signatures that can be used to map their distribution across broad geographic regions.
Panda Habitat Distribution Wolong Nature Reserve MODIS Data (250 m / pixel) Viña et al. 2008. Remote Sensing of Environment 112: 2160-2169.
Suite of Surrogates of Canopy Characteristics Chlorophyll Content & Green LAI Gitelson et al. 2005. Geophys. Res. Lett. Canopy Moisture Hunt & Rock. 1989. Remote Sens. Environ. Percent Canopy Cover Gitelson et al. 2002. Remote Sens. Environ. fAPAR Viña & Gitelson. 2005. Geophys. Res. Lett.
Panda Habitat Distribution Current Geographic Range MODIS Data (500 m / pixel)
A Analyses at Species Level Chao-Sorensen Floristic Similarity Index (Chao et al. 2005. Ecol. Lett.) Qinling Mountain Region
Principal Coordinates of phenologic similarity (1- euclidean distance) Phenologic Similarity MODIS Data (500 m / pixel)
Conclusions • Forests are a very conspicuous land cover type (40-50%) • Areas that are habitat for the giant pandas represent ~25% of the forest areas • Some species associations can be isolated and mapped using their characteristic phenological signatures
Next Steps • Continue collecting field and remotely sensed data in all the mountain regions comprising the giant panda geographic range • Perform time series analyses in the entire geographic range to evaluate phenological traits (using high temporal resolution MODIS data) that can be related with different species associations • Evaluate relationships between local spatial heterogeneity and species richness using intermediate (e.g., Landsat) and high spatial resolution data (e.g., IKONOS)
Acknowledgements • NASA – Terrestrial Ecology and Biodiversity Program • NASA – Land Cover/Land Use Change Program • National Science Foundation • National Natural Science Foundation of China • Global Land Cover Facility, University of Maryland