The Vegetation Condition Index (VCI) is used to assess vegetation health and stress levels by comparing current vegetation conditions to historical minimum and maximum greenness for the same area. The VCI ranges from 0 to 100, where lower values indicate stressed vegetation (e.g., due to drought) and higher values (above 50) indicate healthy conditions. This index helps monitor vegetation anomalies and detect environmental stresses such as drought. On the maps, brown indicates areas of stressed vegetation, while blue represents better-than-normal conditions.
These maps compare the current satellite-derived greenness with the average greenness for the same 10-day period (e.g., 1 to 10 January) in previous years, providing insight into how current conditions relate to historical ones. Four map products are available, comparing the current 10-day greenness with (1) the long-term average, (2) the previous 4-year average, (3) the same period one year ago, and (4) the previous 10-day period. On the maps, red indicates areas where current greenness is below the long-term average, green indicates better-than-average conditions, and yellow represents normal conditions. The greenness index, also called the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), is calculated by comparing the difference between near-infrared (which vegetation reflects strongly) and red light (which vegetation absorbs) and is measured by sensors onboard satellites.