Monitoring the ecological environment of open-pit coalfields in cold zone of Northeast China using Landsat time series images of 2000-2015

Evaluating the deterioration of ecological environment and vegetation of coalfields caused by China’s large-scale coal mining activities is important because of the fragile ecological environment and low temperature in cold and arid areas. This study takes the open coal pits of Haizhou, Gulianhe, an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hongdan Zhang, Yungang Cao, Xiaolei Zhang, Xuefeng Ji, Fashuai Li, Wenbin Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering in Slavonski Brod, Faculty of Electrical Engineering in Osijek, Faculty of Civil Engineering in Osijek 2017-01-01
Series:Tehnički Vjesnik
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/257846
Description
Summary:Evaluating the deterioration of ecological environment and vegetation of coalfields caused by China’s large-scale coal mining activities is important because of the fragile ecological environment and low temperature in cold and arid areas. This study takes the open coal pits of Haizhou, Gulianhe, and Huolinhe as examples and proposes a method for evaluating their ecological environment using Landsat time series images based on the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) variations of open-pit coalfields in cold and arid zones. The average NDVI value of the mining area each month was calculated using Landsat image data from 2000 to 2015. The vegetation cover area in the coalfields was extracted according to the NDVI threshold, and the scatter plots of the annual maximum NDVI and vegetation cover area were drawn. We fitted the variation trend line of maximum NDVI value and vegetation cover area to reduce the effect of meteorological factors on NDVI values. Results show that after the closure of open pit and reclamation of dump area, the NDVI of open-pit coalfields and vegetation cover area have been increasing rapidly over the last decade, and the ecological environment of these coalfields has obviously improved. The coal mining activities have led to the rapid decline of annual maximum NDVI and vegetation cover area of the coalfields in permafrost zones, and the ecological environment of coalfields continues to deteriorate. Although the quarterly average NDVI remains unchanged in non-permafrost mining coalfields under coal exploitation, the vegetation cover area in the coalfields decreases linearly, indicating that the ecological environment of the coalfields tends to deteriorate. From an ecological environment protection perspective, the results of this study provide a basis for decision making in constructing large-scale open pits in cold and arid zones.
ISSN:1330-3651
1848-6339