Backgrounds Vegetation dynamic plays a dominant role in the global carbon cycle and climate, especially in vulnerable karst ecosystem. Many studies have examined past several decades changes in vegetation greenness and the associated with climate drivers. Yet, few studies have analyzed the vegetation change in global karst regions particularly in the last decades when climate change and anthropogenic disturbance widely occurred.Methods In this study, we investigated the spatio-temporal variations of vegetation dynamic using the Seasonally Integrated Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (SINDVI) and examined their relationship to climate changes by correlation analysis, the ordinary least squares method investigate the variation trends and the Mann-Kendal test to detect the turning point from 2001 to 2020.
ResultsAs expected, there have greening trend in global karst SINDVI from 2001 to 2020, with significant increasing trend in China (range = 0.836, P < 0.05), Europe (range = 0.456, P < 0.05) and many other regions.According to correlation analyses, SINDVI is water-limited in arid and semi-arid regions, such as Middle East and central Asia, and temperature-limited in northern high-latitude.Conclusions consistent with previous studies, our results suggest that anthropogenic activities are mainly responsible for increasing vegetation greenness in tailoring management measures (e.g., Ecological Engineering, the Grain to Green Project) of China and Europe, intensive farmed in Middle East. Coupling warming temperature and increasing precipitation, southeastern Asia and Russia showed an increasing trend in SINDVI. In general, climate factors were the dominant drivers of the variation in vegetation greenness in globally karst regions during research period.