Multitemporal monitoring of paramos as critical water sources in Central Colombia
Multitemporal monitoring of paramos as critical water sources in Central Colombia
Paramos, unique and biodiverse ecosystems found solely in the high mountain regions of the tropics, are under threat. Despite their crucial role as primary water sources and significant carbon repositories in Colombia, they are deteriorating rapidly and garner less attention than other vulnerable ecosystems like the Amazon rainforest. Their fertile soil and unique climate make them prime locations for agriculture and cattle grazing, often coinciding with economically critical deposits such as coal which has led to a steady decline in paramo area. Anthropic impact was evaluated using multispectral images from Landsat and Sentinel over 37 years, on the Guerrero and Rabanal paramos in central Colombia which have experienced rapid expansion of mining and agriculture. Our analysis revealed that since 1984, the Rabanal and Guerrero paramos have lost 47.96% and 59.96% of their native vegetation respectively, replaced primarily by crops, pastures, and planted forests. We detected alterations in the spectral signatures of native vegetation near coal coking ovens, indicating a deterioration of paramo health and potential impact on ecosystem services. Consequently, human activity is reducing the extent of paramos and their efficiency as water sources and carbon sinks, potentially leading to severe regional and even global consequences
Murad Rodriguez, Cesar Augusto
6bc8bc71-609f-4248-a07c-0b1846bf9468
Pearse, Jillian
9db469f1-1610-436d-9e80-c97277d21274
Huguet, Carme
7170ce8e-54eb-4a9e-9be8-9f45981df85c
19 July 2024
Murad Rodriguez, Cesar Augusto
6bc8bc71-609f-4248-a07c-0b1846bf9468
Pearse, Jillian
9db469f1-1610-436d-9e80-c97277d21274
Huguet, Carme
7170ce8e-54eb-4a9e-9be8-9f45981df85c
Murad Rodriguez, Cesar Augusto, Pearse, Jillian and Huguet, Carme
(2024)
Multitemporal monitoring of paramos as critical water sources in Central Colombia.
Scientific Reports, 14.
(doi:10.1038/s41598-024-67563-z).
Abstract
Paramos, unique and biodiverse ecosystems found solely in the high mountain regions of the tropics, are under threat. Despite their crucial role as primary water sources and significant carbon repositories in Colombia, they are deteriorating rapidly and garner less attention than other vulnerable ecosystems like the Amazon rainforest. Their fertile soil and unique climate make them prime locations for agriculture and cattle grazing, often coinciding with economically critical deposits such as coal which has led to a steady decline in paramo area. Anthropic impact was evaluated using multispectral images from Landsat and Sentinel over 37 years, on the Guerrero and Rabanal paramos in central Colombia which have experienced rapid expansion of mining and agriculture. Our analysis revealed that since 1984, the Rabanal and Guerrero paramos have lost 47.96% and 59.96% of their native vegetation respectively, replaced primarily by crops, pastures, and planted forests. We detected alterations in the spectral signatures of native vegetation near coal coking ovens, indicating a deterioration of paramo health and potential impact on ecosystem services. Consequently, human activity is reducing the extent of paramos and their efficiency as water sources and carbon sinks, potentially leading to severe regional and even global consequences
Text
s41598-024-67563-z
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 July 2024
Published date: 19 July 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 497674
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497674
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 84e7ac29-02bf-4ddd-ba2b-c9cc6af67b46
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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2025 17:59
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:44
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Author:
Cesar Augusto Murad Rodriguez
Author:
Jillian Pearse
Author:
Carme Huguet
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