We used the data of surface reflectance within the green light band from 2002-2003 during the SARS period and 2019-2020 during the current COVID-19 pandemic. We compared the change in vegetation before and after the virus breakouts, by which we then analyzed the impact on the vegetation due to the pandemics and the related numerous short-term changes in economic and social activity. This effectively addressed the challenge of using space-based data to document the environmental changes caused by the pandemics.
From the NASA EARTHDATA database, we found that there is a timeline that can track the surface reflectance data back to 2002 and 2003. So, we started to think about a similar challenge in 2003--the SARS pandemic in China. As the breakout point of COVID-19, we chose Wuhan as the location to compare the differences between the breakouts of SARS and COVID-19. Considering the topic we choose, quiet planet, we'd like to analyze the environment changes, especially the vegetation coverage rate change. We found that the EARTHDATA datasets can allow us to get the data from a specific location. The data for the whole section is divided into a 2400*2400 grid, and the accuracy for each is 500 meters. We scaled the map by latitude and longitude to obtain the data for Wuhan. We chose four groups of data, April 2002 to compare with April 2002, and April 2019 with April 2020. We chose the data using HDFView , collected data using Excel, and ran the analysis using Mathematica. In the end, the number we have shows that the rate of the surface reflectance decreases during 2002-2003 is different from that during 2019-2020. However, we have discovered that:
(1) The trends of the impacts from the two pandemics on the surface reflectance are similar
(2) Prior to the outbreaks of the two pandemics, Wuhan implemented large-scale tree-planting and this can be demonstrated in the reflectance peaks seen in the last week of both datasets, such as the surface reflectance increase that resulted from massive tree-planting in March 2002
(3) We can infer from the results that the two pandemics led to decrease in human intervention and conclude that human intervention in building a green environment is meaningful and detrimental
NASA EARTH DATA: https://search.earthdata.nasa.gov/search
News Page: http://www.peopledaily.com.cn/GB/huanbao/55/20020403/701210.html