Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

Assessment and Attribution of Mangrove Forest Changes in the Indian Sundarbans from 2000 to 2020

Author Affiliations
Jadavpur University, University College London, University of East Anglia, Tyndall Centre
Published InRemote Sensing
Year2021
Citations81

Abstract

The Indian Sundarbans, together with Bangladesh, comprise the largest mangrove forest in the world. Reclamation of the mangroves in this region ceased in the 1930s. However, they are still subject to adverse environmental influences, such as sediment starvation due to migration of the main river channels in the Ganges–Brahmaputra delta over the last few centuries, cyclone landfall, wave action from the Bay of Bengal—changing hydrology due to upstream water diversion—and the pervasive effects of relative sea-level rise. This study builds on earlier work to assess changes from 2000 to 2020 in mangrove extent, genus composition, and mangrove ‘health’ indicators, using various vegetation indices derived from Landsat and MODIS satellite imagery by performing maximum likelihood supervised classification. We show that about…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.