Phenological Classification and Atmospheric Drought Response of Riparian
Vegetation in Drylands of the Southwestern United States
Abstract
Access to groundwater leaves riparian plants in drylands resistant to
atmospheric drought but vulnerable to changes in climate or water use
that reduce streamflow and groundwater tables. Despite the vulnerability
of riparian vegetation to water balance changes few extensible methods
have been developed to automatically map riparian plants at the scale of
individual stands or stream reaches, to assess their response to changes
in moisture due to drought and climate change, and to contrast those
responses across plant functional types. We used LiDAR and a sub-annual
timeseries of NDVI to map vegetation and then assessed drought response
by comparing a drought index to variation in a remotely sensed metric of
plant health. First, a random forest model was built to classify
vegetation communities based on phenological changes in Sentinel-2 NDVI.
This model produced community classes with an overall accuracy of
97.9%; accuracy for the riparian vegetation class was 98.9%. Following
this initial classification, LiDAR measurements of vegetation height
were used to split the riparian class into structural subclasses.
Multiple Endmember Spectral Mixture Analysis was applied to a timeseries
of Landsat imagery from 1984 to 2018, producing annual sub-pixel
fractions of green vegetation, non-photosynthetic vegetation, and soil.
Relationships were assessed within structural subclasses between
mid-summer green vegetation fraction (GV) and the Standardized
Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI), a measure of soil
moisture drought. Among riparian vegetation subclasses, all groups
showed significant positive correlations between SPEI and GV, indicating
an increase in healthy plant material during wetter years. However, the
relationship was strongest for herbaceous plants (R^2=0.509,
m=0.0278), intermediate for shrubs (R^2=0.339, m=0.0262), and weakest
for the largest trees (R^2=0.1373, m=0.0145). This implies decoupling
of larger riparian plants from the impacts of atmospheric drought due to
subsidies provided by groundwater resources. Our method was extended
successfully to multiple climatically-dissimilar dryland systems in the
American Southwest, and the results provide a basis for ongoing studies
on the fine-scale drought response and climatic vulnerability of
riparian woodlands.