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Tytuł artykułu

Characteristics of Selected Peatland Uses and Soil Moisture Based on TVDI

Treść / Zawartość
Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
The conversion of peatland from forest to non-forest causes environmental damage and increases high land dryness. Mapping of peatland based on dryness is very important to control and prevent fires. This study aims at characterizing peatland based on the level of temperature vegetation dryness index (TVDI) and evaluating the correlation between TVDI value and soil moisture. The research was conducted in August 2018 during the dry season. The area of research located in peat hydrological unit of Sibumbung River – Batok River in Ogan Komering Ilir (OKI) District of South Sumatra Province covering 63,427 ha area that consists of various land uses. The result showed that extreme wet category is found in water bodies and secondary forests that have high density, moderate wet is found in paddy fields and grass, normal area is found in the area covered by low-density trees, moderate dry is found in shrubs and oil palm plantations with good management and extreme dry areas is found in grasses and oil palm with poor cultivation management. There is a correlation between the TVDI value to the soil moisture on 0–10 cm and 10–20 cm and 20–30 cm depth.
Słowa kluczowe
Rocznik
Strony
194--200
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 19 poz., rys.
Twórcy
autor
  • Study Program of Environmental Science, Sriwijaya University, South Sumatera, Indonesia Faculty of Agriculture, Musi Rawas University, South Sumatra, Indonesia
  • Faculty of Agriculture, Sriwijaya University, South Sumatra, Indonesia
  • Faculty of Agriculture, Sriwijaya University, South Sumatra, Indonesia
  • Faculty of Engineering, Sriwijaya University, South Sumatra, Indonesia
Bibliografia
  • 1. Acharya, T.V. and I. Yang. 2015. Exploring Landsat 8. International Journal of IT, Engineering and Applied Sciences Research (IJIEASR). 4(4), 4–10.
  • 2. Armanto, M.A., E. Wildayana., M.S. Imanudin., H. Junedi., and M.. Zuhdi. 2017. Selected Properties of Peat Degradation on Different Land Uses and the Sustainable Management. Journal of Wetlands Environmental Management 5 (2), 14–22.
  • 3. Arshad, A.M. and M.E. Armanto. 2014. Effect of soil parent material on oil palm yield. Journal of Biology, Agriculture and Healthcare. 4 (10), 4–10.
  • 4. Chen, J., C. Wang., H. Jiang., H. Jiang., L. Mao and Z. Yu. 2011. Estimating soil moisture using Temperature-Vegetation Dryness Index (TVDI) in the Huang-huai-hai (HHH) plain. International Journal of Remote Sensing 32 (4), 1165–1177.
  • 5. Chen, S., Z. Wen,. H. Jiang ., Q. Zhao, X. Zhang and Y. Chen. 2015. Temperature Vegetation Dryness Index Estimation of Soil Moisture under Different Tree Species. Sustainability. 7, 11401–11417.
  • 6. Corley, R.H.V. and P.B. Tinker. 2016. The oil palm. Fifth edition. Wiley Blackwell, UK.
  • 7. Du, L., N. Song., Ke Liu, J. Hou., Yue Hu., Y. Zhu., X. Wang., L. Wan and Y. Gou. 2017. Comparison of Two Simulation Methods of The Temperature Vegetation Dryness Index (TVDI) for Drought Monitoring in Semi-Arid Regions of China. MDPI Remote Sensing Journal 9 (2), 1–9.
  • 8. Englhart, S.; Jubanski and Siegert, F. 2013 Quantifying Dynamics in Tropical Peat swamp Forest Biomass with Multi-Temporal LiDAR Datasets. Remote sensing (5), 2368–2388
  • 9. Holidi, Hermanto dan D. Irawanto. 2014. The Growth of Palm Oil (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) Seedlings on Peat Soil Media in Various of Water Table. Prosiding Seminar Nasional Lahan Suboptimal 2014. 26–27 September 2014. Palembang. Hal. 112118.
  • 10. Holidi, Etty Safriyani, Warjiyanto dan Sutejo. 2015. The Growth of Oil Palm Seedling on Peat Soil in Various of Flooding Height. Jurnal Ilmu Pertanian 18 (3), 135–140.
  • 11. Hoojier, A., Page S., Jauhiainen J., Lee WA., Idris A., Anshari G. 2012. Subsidence and Carbon Loss in Drained Tropical Peatlands. Biogeosciences. 9, 1053–1071.
  • 12. Junedi, H,; M. E. Armanto, S. Bernas, and M. Imanudin. 2017. Changes to Some Physical Properties due to Conversion of Secondary Forest of Peat into Oil Palm Plantation. Sriwijaya Journal of Environment 2 (3), 76–80.
  • 13. Keane, R.E. 2015. Wildland fuel fundamentals and applications. Springer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht, London.
  • 14. Kirana, A.P., I.S. Sitanggang and L. Syaufina. 2016. Hotspot pattern distribution in peatland area in Sumatra based on spatio temporal clustering. The 2nd International Symposium on LAPAN-IPB Satellite for Food Security and Environmental Monitoring 2015, LISAT-FSEM 2015. Procedia Environmental Sciences (33), 635–645.
  • 15. Lim, K.H., Lim, S.S., Parish. F. And Suharto, R. 2012. RSPO Manual on best management practices (BMPs ) forexisting oil palm cultivation on peat. RSPO,Kuala Lumpur.
  • 16. Miettinen, J. And S.C. Liew. 2010. Status of peatland degradation and development in Sumatra and Kalimantan. Journal Ambio 39, 394–401.
  • 17. Osaki, M., K. Hirose., H.Segah and F. Felmy. 2016. Tropical peatland and peatland definition in Indonesia in Tropical Peatland Ecosystem. Springer, Sapporo. Japan
  • 18. Rahimzadeh P. and Berg, A. 2016. Chapter 3Soil Moisture Retrievals Using Optical/TIR Methods. Journal Satellite Soil Moisture Retrival, 47–72.
  • 19. Schirmbeck, L.W, D.C. Fontana, J. Schirmbeck, V.P. Mengue. 2017. Understanding TVDI as an index that expresses soil moisture. Journal of Hyperspectral Remote Sensing 7 (2), 82–90.
Uwagi
Opracowanie rekordu w ramach umowy 509/P-DUN/2018 ze środków MNiSW przeznaczonych na działalność upowszechniającą naukę (2019).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-fd6585f8-9479-4f5a-a0ba-e422e65d3394
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