Fuente:
Sustainability - Revista científica (MDPI)
Sustainability, Vol. 18, Pages 4732: Global Lake Color Phenology Changes Since the 1980s Based on Landsat Images
Sustainability doi: 10.3390/su18104732
Authors:
Chaoqiong Wang
Xuege Wang
Xiaoyi Shen
Lake color is an intuitive indicator reflecting the ecological and physicochemical status of lakes and is of great value for both ecological monitoring and environmental assessment. However, the types, spatiotemporal variations, and driving mechanisms of global lake color phenology remain unclear. In this study, we systematically analyzed the color phenology of 975 global lakes based on Landsat remote sensing data from 1984 to 2021. The results indicate that lake color phenology can be categorized into six types, including the perennial green type, evergreen type, and seasonal patterns (spring green, summer green, autumn green, and winter green). Approximately 43.9% of the lakes are classified as the evergreen type, mainly concentrated in the Southern Hemisphere. Further research reveals notable spatial differences in the change in lake color phenology: about 69.4% of lakes in the Southern Hemisphere exhibit relatively stable phenological patterns (frequency of changes within the study area ≤ 2), while approximately 64.4% in the Northern Hemisphere show phenological variations. This dynamic disparity is closely related to lake attributes (area, water depth, elevation) as well as external climatic and watershed conditions (precipitation, wind speed, vegetation). Our findings contribute to developing the interannual patterns of lake color into a novel ecological indicator, thereby advancing the dynamic monitoring and assessment of global lake status.