“…Both NDVI and EVI are low in areas with sparse vegetation cover (deserts), intermediate in shrublands and savannas (with high seasonal variation in grassland ecosystems), and reach the highest values in broadleaved forests (Huete et al, 2011). In the tropics, vegetation indices have been previously used for land‐cover classification and to detect land‐cover dynamics (Hartter et al, 2011; Setiawan et al, 2014; Tucker et al, 1985; Vijith & Dodge‐Wan, 2020; Wanyama et al, 2020), map forest disturbances (Murillo‐Sandoval et al, 2017), predict forest resilience to drought (Verbesselt et al, 2016), monitor natural succession (Caughlin et al, 2021), estimate large‐scale patterns in biomass (Anaya et al, 2009) or primary production (Sjöström et al, 2011), and detect seasonal phenological rhythms and photosynthetic capacity (Brando et al, 2010; Valtonen et al, 2013; Xiao et al, 2006). For example, in the Amazon, the first phase of forest regrowth can be detected as an increase in NDVI (Steininger, 1996).…”