Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11667/270
Appears in Collections:University of Stirling Research Data
Title: Evidences of drought-induced forest decline and tree mortality in the hygrophilous forests of central Chile
Creator(s): Paredes Berríos, Pablo Tomás
Venegas González, Alejandro Danilo
Contact Email: pablo.paredesberrios@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: Central Chile
Mediterranean
Forests
Drought
Remote Sensing
Ecology
Citation: Paredes Berríos, PT; Venegas González, AD (2026): Evidences of drought-induced forest decline and tree mortality in the hygrophilous forests of central Chile. Version 1.0. University of Stirling, School of Natural Sciences. Dataset. http://hdl.handle.net/11667/270
Publisher: University of Stirling, School of Natural Sciences
Dataset Description (Abstract): This dataset compiles field measurements, high‑resolution UAV imagery products, satellite‑derived vegetation indices, and precipitation records to characterize vegetation condition, canopy structure, and long‑term productivity patterns across forested sites in central Chile. The first component consists of phytosociological field data collected over a total sampled area of 5,375 m² across seven protected areas. These records include species identity, diameter at breast height (DBH ≥ 5 cm), and canopy cover for all measured individuals. Tree vitality was classified into three categories, Healthy, Stressed, and Highly Stressed/Dead, based on the proportion of live canopy cover, following a simplified version of the criteria proposed by Dobbertin (2005). These field measurements provide ground‑based information on forest structure and condition. The second component includes multispectral UAV imagery products acquired during the 2022–2023 summer season over two forest sites. The flights produced 8 cm spatial resolution orthomosaics with six spectral bands (Blue, Green, Red, Red Edge, Near‑Infrared, and NDVI). Using supervised classification (maximum likelihood algorithm), five land‑cover classes were mapped: alive canopy, leafless canopy, naked soil, shade, and additional background categories. The classification was trained using manually interpreted polygons and evaluated with a confusion matrix. The resulting land‑cover products quantify defoliated and non‑defoliated canopy areas at fine spatial resolution. The third component contains satellite‑based vegetation productivity products derived from the Harmonized Landsat–Sentinel (HLS) collection. These data include monthly NDVI composites at 30‑m resolution from 2013 onward, produced from atmospherically corrected and cloud‑masked reflectance images. Each NDVI time series was converted into standardized anomaly products based on long‑term means and standard deviations, enabling comparisons of vegetation condition across years. Complementing these, the dataset also includes MODIS NDVI products at 250‑m resolution, covering the period 2002–2025. Monthly NDVI values were used to compute seasonal cumulative NDVI (cNDVI) for each growing season, and these values were standardized relative to a 2002–2007 baseline. The resulting z‑standardized cNDVI (zcNDVI) products provide long‑term regional indicators of vegetation productivity and include extracted time series for the sites where mortality was observed. Finally, the dataset provides precipitation records from weather stations located within 15 km of the affected forest sites. Annual precipitation data from 2002-2024 were transformed into standardized anomalies using the same 2002-2007 reference period. Only stations with complete observations for that baseline were included, resulting in a final set of 18 stations. Supplementary tables list all selected stations and the total number of reporting stations per year.
Dataset Description (TOC): This dataset compiles field measurements, UAV‑based canopy mapping, satellite‑derived vegetation indices, and climate anomaly records for forest sites in central Chile. It includes: Phytosociological field data (5,375 m² total sampling area), with species identity, DBH (≥5 cm), alive canopy cover, and tree vitality classes. Multispectral UAV imagery products at 8 cm resolution, including orthomosaics, NDVI layers, and land‑cover classifications (alive canopy, leafless canopy, naked soil, shade). HLS‑derived NDVI products (30 m), including monthly NDVI composites (2013–present) and standardized NDVI anomaly layers. MODIS vegetation productivity datasets (250 m), including monthly NDVI (2002–2025), seasonal cumulative NDVI (cNDVI), and standardized zcNDVI anomalies. Precipitation anomaly records from weather stations within 15 km of study sites (2002–2024), standardized using a 2002–2007 reference period. All products are organized by data type and resolution and provide complementary information on canopy structure, vegetation condition, long‑term productivity patterns, and climatic variability.
Type: dataset
Contract/Grant Title: Assessing the resilience of Mediterranean-type ecosystems of Chile to projected drought conditions: A multi-scale approach
Funder(s): Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo de Chile (ANID)
Contract/Grant Number: FONDECyT Regular N° 1221701
Geographic Location(s): Mediterranean Bioregion of Central Chile
Time Period: 2022 to 2023
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11667/270
Rights: After embargo period ends, rights covered by the standard CC-BY 4.0 licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Affiliation(s) of Dataset Creator(s): University of Stirling (BES)

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zcNDVI_cc.tif523.81 MBTIFFUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
HLS2_Mosaic.tif9.35 GBTIFFUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
ClassificationPirque.tif162.86 MBTIFFUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
ClassificationPiche.tif37.54 MBTIFFUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
Mortality_pts.xlsx3.91 kBMicrosoft Excel XMLUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
zcNDVI.xlsx14.89 kBMicrosoft Excel XMLUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy
PlotsData.xlsx74.36 kBMicrosoft Excel XMLUnder Embargo until 1/12/2026     Request a copy

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