Notice: The Sea Ice Index is updated monthly. Funding constraints prevent us from updating or developing the other Cryospheric Climate Indicators. Soil Temperatures, Snow Cover, and Greenness are shown as prototypes.
Greenness: Seasonally Integrated NDVIBackgroundSeasonally integrated NDVI (SINDVI) is NDVI integrated over the growing season. We count the growing season as beginning when NDVI crosses a threshold value of 0.3 (the same value used to indicate nascence). North of 50 degrees latitude, this usually occurs between late May and the beginning of July. The season ends when NDVI drops below 0.3 as senescence occurs.
SINDVI Anomalies (Relative to 1982-2001 Mean)
Notes: The anomaly images above show the widespread greening that has taken place in the late 1990s relative to the mid 1980s, marked by the predominance of negative (brown) values on the left and positive (blue) values on the right. (The grey areas in the images are where the threshold of 0.3 was not exceeded. Shield, bare rock, ice sheets, and areas largely covered by water have low or zero NDVI.) See Continuing the time series with MODIS data for discussion of why more recent MODIS data are not used.
Notes: Time series of SINDVI values (left) and anomalies (relative to the 1982-2001 mean, right) for regional subsets (red squares in the images) show a general upward trend in greenness that is fairly well correlated from place to place. The downward spike at all locations in 1992 reflects the residual effect of the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo volcanic eruption. (Smaller SINDVI values in 1992-1994 remained in many NDVI data sets even after attempts to correct for Pinatubo's effects on AVHRR-derived NDVI, and primary production may have been reduced as a result of increases in stratospheric aerosols, according to Stow et al., 2003). The dashed lines are data from MODIS. See Indicator Processing and Discussion for more information.
Notes: The North Slope, AK section was divided into subsections based on literature suggesting a different greening response for coastal versus inland tundra (see Discussion). Coastal tundra SINDVI differs from inland higher elevation tundra SINDVI by a factor of 1 to 2. The large number of lakes near the coast is one reason for the difference, but other reasons such as differences in soil and vegetation type are at play as well. The anomaly series show that in spite of different greenness values, the two physiographical provinces are responding to changes quite similarly. A more detailed study might yield different results with higher resolution data (For example, Stow et al, 2003, find a difference in the rate of change of greenness between the two areas when a 3 km AVHRR data set is used.) The overall increase in SINDVI on the North Slope has been attributed to warmer air temperatures, earlier snow melt, and greater shrubbiness (Walker et al., 2003). |