Cooling Effects of Increased Green Fodder Area on Native Grassland in the Northeastern Tibetan Plateau

With increasing livestock production due to high demand for consumption, the planted area of green fodder, an essential livestock supplement, has grown rapidly and will continue to grow in China. However, the climate feedback of this rapid land cover conversion is still unclear. Using multisource data (e.g. remote sensing observation and meteorological data), we compared the land surface temperature of green fodder plantation areas and native grassland in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. The green fodder area was detected to be cooler than the native grassland by −0.54 ± 0.98 °C in the daytime throughout the growing season. The highest magnitude (−1.20 ± 1.68 °C) of cooling was observed in August. A nonradiative process, indicated by the energy redistribution factor, dominated the cooling effects compared to the radiative process altered by albedo variation. The results indicate the potential cooling effects of increasing green fodder area on native grassland, highlighting the necessity of investigating climate feedback from anthropogenic land use change, including green fodder expansion.

Data and Resources

Field Value
encoding utf8
harvest_url https://ckan.americaview.org/dataset/94ea1a7c-a8dd-4da6-b652-736cf2447e14
Groups
  • Academia
  • AmeriGEOSS
Tags
  • afrigeo
  • afrigeoss
  • americaview
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • eurogeo
  • eurogeoss
  • geo
  • geoss
  • global
  • remote-sensing
isopen True
license_id cc-by
license_title Creative Commons Attribution
license_url http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by
metadata_created 2026-02-11T15:28:11.031581
metadata_modified 2026-02-11T15:28:11.031585
notes With increasing livestock production due to high demand for consumption, the planted area of green fodder, an essential livestock supplement, has grown rapidly and will continue to grow in China. However, the climate feedback of this rapid land cover conversion is still unclear. Using multisource data (e.g. remote sensing observation and meteorological data), we compared the land surface temperature of green fodder plantation areas and native grassland in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. The green fodder area was detected to be cooler than the native grassland by −0.54 ± 0.98 °C in the daytime throughout the growing season. The highest magnitude (−1.20 ± 1.68 °C) of cooling was observed in August. A nonradiative process, indicated by the energy redistribution factor, dominated the cooling effects compared to the radiative process altered by albedo variation. The results indicate the potential cooling effects of increasing green fodder area on native grassland, highlighting the necessity of investigating climate feedback from anthropogenic land use change, including green fodder expansion.
num_resources 1
num_tags 12
title Cooling Effects of Increased Green Fodder Area on Native Grassland in the Northeastern Tibetan Plateau