About this Research Topic
Remote sensing, with various temporal and spatial resolutions, is a promising approach for monitoring biophysical parameters as indicators of vegetation dynamics, especially long-term vegetation dynamics under various spatial scales. This research topic will focus on remote sensing applications on long-term vegetation dynamics and the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation dynamics in forest ecosystems. The topics and aspects for long-term vegetation dynamics in forest ecosystems could be historical changes and the current vegetation growth status, species composition, and diversity, population density, or vegetation migration under various spatial scales. The goal of this research topic is also to explore dominant factors for long-term vegetation dynamics under various spatial scales.
This Research Topic brings together research across various disciplines, with insights, new methods, and findings based on remote sensing approaches of long-term monitoring of vegetation dynamics with a multi-spatial perspective. Studies of vegetation dynamics in all types of forest ecosystems will be welcome, including, but not limited to, rain forests, mangrove forests, subtropical evergreen forests, broadleaved deciduous forests, mixed forests, boreal forests, forest-grassland transition ecotones, and forest plantation. Contributions may include, but are not limited to:
• Spatial heterogeneity of long-term vegetation dynamics
• Innovative approach for long-term vegetation monitoring using remote sensing
• Response of vegetation dynamics to climate change
• Ecological degradation and the impact factors
• Effectiveness of ecosystem management
• Plant regeneration after ecological disturbance or pressure
• the impact of human activities on vegetation growth
• Vegetation response to nitrogen deposition
Keywords: Long-term Vegetation dynamics, Terrestrial ecosystems, Disturbance, Climate change, Anthropogenic impact, Remote sensing, Satellite images, Various spatial scales
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.