The Greening Isle: How Satellites Reveal Changing Forage for a Wild Deer Population
A new study demonstrates the power of integrating long-term field data with satellite remote sensing to track ecological change. Researchers validated high-resolution Landsat satellite imagery against three decades of ground-collected vegetation biomass data from the Isle of Rum, Scotland. They found that the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) serves as a reliable proxy for forage availability for the island’s wild red deer population. The analysis reveals a significant long-term “greening” trend across the landscape, with satellite data providing detailed spatial insights into how different vegetation groups, including deer-preferred grasslands, are changing over time.
Study Significance: For researchers in genetics and genomics, this work establishes a robust framework for linking phenotypic and population-level data with environmental covariates. The validated, high-resolution environmental layers generated by such studies are crucial for genomic analyses seeking to understand the genetic basis of local adaptation, trait variation, and population dynamics in wild species. This approach directly supports functional genomics and evolutionary studies by providing precise, landscape-scale data on the selective pressures—like changing resource availability—that shape genetic diversity.
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