Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 2)

LANDSCAPE’S CHANGE DETECTION 
IN THE SOUTHERN SLOPE OF THE QINLING MOUNTAINS, CHINA 
Xuehua LIU *, Qiang JIN, Jihong LI, Shuang ZHANG 
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China — 
xuehua-hjx@tsinghua.edu.cn; (jingiang99, lijh02, zhangshuang03)@mails.tsinghua.edu.en 
PS ICWG III/IV 
KEY WORDS: Change detection, Landscape, Land use / cover (LUC), NDVI, Human activities, The Qinling Mountains, Giant 
panda nature reserves (NRs). 
ABSTRACT: 
The landscape on the southern slope of the Qinling Mountains, the home of many wildlife species including the giant pandas, golden 
takin and golden monkey, has been logged and influenced for a long term. This caused the obvious decreasing of the wildlife’s 
habitat and has produced strong impacts on their survival and distribution. It is necessary for managers to have a quick and accurate 
method to detect the landscape changes, which can help them to be aware the changing situation. Consequently, managers could take 
measures to keep controlling the changes. Change detection through remote sensing has now been applied widely in terms of its 
quick processes and accurate results. However, it has not been well used in detecting changes of landscape in giant panda nature 
reserves in China up to now. This article focuses on the landscape’s change detection in Changqing, Foping and Guanyinshan NRs, 
containing LUC change and NDVI change through spatial analyzing TM images acquired on September 15 1988 and September 8 
1997. Two LUC maps from two different years have overall accuracies of 73.74% and 75.19% and kappa values of 0.6829 and 
0.6968. À LUC changing map was created and show that the exact areas of “conifer”, “deciduous broadleaf”, and “mixed conifer- 
broadleaf” forests have greater changing, however, three small-area LUCs (i.e., *farmland and settlement", *water", *rock and bare- 
land") have larger changing rates. NDVI analysis of two years? images shows an obvious change with higher NDVI in 1988 than in 
1997 in total. Most of changes are located in the regions along or near the rivers and reserves! boundaries, which reflects 
  
substantially that human being has strong impacts on the surrounding landscape. 
1. INTRODUCTION 
The southern slope of the Qinling Mountains is not only one of 
the important habitats for giant pandas in China, but also the 
home for many other rare and endangered species. The 
completion and diversity of the entire ecosystem is essential for 
conserving those rare and endangered species and maintaining 
balance of the ecosystem in the Qinling Mountains. However, 
the vegetations, which form the home of those rare and 
endangered species, on the southern slope of the Qinling 
Mountains has been experiencing various extends of logging 
and land use converting for a long term. This caused the 
obvious decreasing of the area of wildlife's habitat and has 
produced strong influences on  wildlife's survival and 
distribution. 
In order to better handle the conflicts between the conservation 
and develop, control the illegal forest cutting and habitat 
degrading activities, and follow a sustainable approach, it is 
necessary for managers to grasper the dynamic information of 
wildlife species, their habitat and human activities inside and 
surrounding the NRs. The remote mountain area with dense 
forest cover brings imaginable difficulties in collecting all kinds 
of information, without mentioning in-time collecting, and 
makes a completion of the ground survey a long period. The 
traditional manual recording and handling the collected 
information is a cost and time-consuming task and hard to in- 
time update information. Furthermore, without spatial 
  
" Corresponding author. Tel: -86-10-62785610 ext 14; Fax: 
Email: xuehua-hjx@tsinghua.edu.cn 
information and analysis, it is not easy to make clear 
comparisons among nature reserves in terms of their wildlife, 
habitats and human impacts. Consequently, it causes managers 
difficulties to make decisions due to lacking of strong 
supporting information and evidence (Gao and Wu 2000). 
Change detection through remote sensing has now been applied 
widely because of its quick analysis processes, accurate results 
and visual spatial information (Zhang 2003). LUC classification 
and mapping for various-period images can be used to detect 
the LUC type change (van Lynden and Mantel 2001), while 
NDVI calculation and mapping for various-period images can 
be applied to detect the change of vegetation quality which has 
been applied in vegetation coverage assessment, crop yield 
estimation and crop identification (Tian and Min 1998). Due to 
that such a research has never been done in the home of giant 
pandas on the southern slope of the Qinling Mountains, China, 
this article applied remote sensing approach to detect landscape 
change (i.e. LUC type change and NDVI value change) in 
three giant panda NRs based on two TM images acquired in 
1988 and 1997. The aims are (1) to illustrate the quick and 
accurate remote sensing approach to the reserve managers, (2) 
to provide the landscape change information to the managers 
and other groups of people. 
+86-10-62785687; 
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