“…Conceptually, the UNCCD [1] defines desertification as a process concerning the degradation of land in arid, semiarid, and dry sub-humid areas, the causes of which can be multiple, and the consequences, which are also numerous, are interlinked in a retroactive way [10]. Given this interpretation, desertification has been understood by different scientific disciplines as a complex phenomenon, capable of encompassing structural factors such as social inequality, the concentration of land ownership, access to water, the means of production, biodiversity, and population density [10,[20][21][22]. Furthermore, around the world, several studies have been developed using remote sensing to monitor and evaluate desertification processes [14,[23][24][25][26][27][28]; however, as desertification processes involve many climatic and anthropic factors, only the spectral dynamics are provided by sensors, and thus, the results obtained have not been entirely sufficient to explain this complex phenomenon.…”