Monitoring of Land Degradation in Greece and Tunisia Using Trends.Earth with a Focus on Cereal Croplands

Author:

Cherif Ines1ORCID,Kolintziki Eleni1ORCID,Alexandridis Thomas K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Remote Sensing, Spectroscopy and GIS, School of Agriculture, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece

Abstract

Land degradation (LD) processes are widespread in drylands worldwide and are accelerated by climate change. As a result, food security and livelihoods are at risk. Thus, there is a need to monitor LD trends, especially in agricultural areas. Mediterranean countries, including Tunisia and Greece, are concerned due to the presence of drivers and pressures causing land degradation. Through the Trends.Earth plugin, the SDG 15.3.1 indicator can be implemented to map LD status. In this study, we mapped LD in Greece and Tunisia for the recommended baseline period of 2001–2015 and the selected reporting period of 2016–2020. The land productivity was assessed within Trends.Earth using the MODIS MOD13Q1 product, while the default datasets were used for the other sub-indicators. The main findings are: (i) the percentage of degraded land decreased from the baseline to the reporting period from 4.83% to 2.62% of total area in Greece and 9.97% to 6.26% in Tunisia—degradation rates that differ from those reported to the UNCCD (United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification) by the respective national authorities; (ii) the dominant land condition in Greece was improved, while in Tunisia, it was stable; (iii) land productivity presented a similar trend through the SDG 15.3.1 indicator over both countries, including the net land productivity dynamics over croplands; (iv) based on analysis using plant functional types performed with MODIS MCD12Q1, the highest portion of degraded land in Greece was located in grasslands and in Tunisia in cereal croplands (after desert areas); and (v) with a focus on LD over cereal croplands, the portion of degraded areas appeared to decrease in both Greece and Tunisia. The percentage was higher in Tunisia, representing 16.52% of the total degraded land during the reporting period compared to 10.83% in Greece. All the above stress the need to foster the adoption of sustainable land management practices, especially in Tunisia, and speed up the implementation of measures to achieve LD neutrality.

Funder

European Union’s Research

Innovation Programme

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Reference53 articles.

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2. Nkonya, E., Mirzabaev, A., and von Braun, J. (2016). Economics of Land Degradation and Improvement—A Global Assessment for Sustainable Development, Springer International Publishing.

3. Bridges, E.M., Hannam, I.D., Oldeman, L.R., Pening de Vries, F.W.T., Scherr, S.J., and Som-patpanit, S. (2001). Responses to Land Degradation, Oxford Press.

4. Arable lands under the pressure of multiple land degradation processes. A global perspective;Patriche;Environ. Res.,2021

5. Zdruli, P., Pagliai, M., Kapur, S., and Faz Cano, A. (2010). Land Degradation and Desertification: Assessment, Mitigation and Remediation, Springer.

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