Site Name
Jamtalferner- vegetation sampling along chronosequence
Short name
Jamtalferner, Chronosequence
Site Description
Monitoring of plant succession in glacier forelands has so far been restricted to feld sampling. In this
study, in situ vegetation sampling along a chronosequence between Little Ice Age (LIA) maximum
extent and the recent glacier terminus at Jamtalferner in the Austrian Alps is compared to time series
of the Normalized Diference Vegetation Index (NDVI) calculated from 13 Landsat scenes (1985–2016).
The glacier terminus positions at 16 dates between the LIA maximum and 2015 were analysed from
historical maps, orthophotos and LiDAR images. We sampled plots of diferent ages since deglaciation,
from very recent to approx. 150 years: after 100 years, roughly 80% of the ground is covered by plants
and ground cover does not increase signifcantly thereafter. The number of species increases from 10–20
species on young sites to 40–50 species after 100 years. The NDVI increases with the time of exposure
from a mean of 0.11 for 1985–1991 to 0.20 in 2009 and 0.27 in 2016. As the increase in ground cover is
clearly reproduced by the NDVI (R² ground cover/NDVI 0.84) – even for sparsely vegetated areas –, we
see a great potential of satellite-borne NDVI to perform regional characterizations of glacier forelands
for hydrological, ecological and hazard management-related applications
Last modified
2022-09-28 11:09:05