• No results found

Scrubbing up: multi scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2020

Share "Scrubbing up: multi scale investigation of woody encroachment in a southern African savannah"

Copied!
24
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

Loading

Figure

Figure 1.Figure 1. Study site locations overlaid on a 2014 Landsat Operational Land Imager image
Figure 2.Figure 2. Examples of woodland and grassland VHR land cover classes: (a) trees; (b) shrubs; (c) long grass and ( Examples of woodland and grassland VHR land cover classes: (d) sparse grass
Table 1. Classification nomenclatures for medium and VHR imagery derived land cover maps.
Figure 3.Figure 3. Land cover classifications of site 1 generated from: (A) VHR QuickBird imagery (2.8 m resolution) in 2002; (B) VHR WorldView-2 imagery (resampled to 2.8 m) in 2014; (C) medium resolution Landsat ETM+ imagery (30 m) in 2002; and (D) mediu
+7

References

Related documents

Client

In today’s classrooms, literacy instruction is undergoing tremendous transformations as new technologies demand new literacies. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to

The average real estate and local stock market correlations in the Asian economies are (significantly) higher than the corresponding regional and global correlations; in contrast

In a second part of the paper, we propose several applications of risk budgeting techniques for risk-based allocation, like risk parity funds and strategic asset allocation, and

Like in simulation study I (see there for details), an IRT model corresponding to the DIF procedure was used to generate the data and no ability differences between reference and

Based on the subsample of self-reported unconstrained firms they conclude that financial constraints cannot be a very important explanation for the observed evolution of the firm size

• generally the locks on the River Thames, namely King's, Godstow, Osney, Iffley and Sandford, create local groundwater recharge zones in the upstream areas. Conversely, the by-pass

Following Siegel, Waldman, and Link (2003), we conjecture that the key stakeholders in university technology transfer are academic scientists, technology licensing officers and other