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Detection of foliage conditions and disturbance from multi-angular high spectral resolution remote sensing

Detection of foliage conditions and disturbance from multi-angular high spectral resolution remote sensing
Detection of foliage conditions and disturbance from multi-angular high spectral resolution remote sensing
Disturbance of forest ecosystems, an important component of the terrestrial carbon cycle, has become a focus of research over recent years, as global warming is about to increase the frequency and severity of natural disturbance events. Remote sensing offers unique opportunities for detection of forest disturbance at multiple scales; however, spatially and temporally continuous mapping of non-stand replacing disturbance remains challenging. First, most high spatial resolution satellite sensors have relatively broad spectral ranges with bandwidths unsuitable for detection of subtle, stress induced, features in canopy reflectance. Second, directional and background reflectance effects, induced by the interactions between the sun-sensor geometry and the observed canopy surface, make up-scaling of empirically derived relationships between changes in spectral reflectance and vegetation conditions difficult. Using an automated tower based spectroradiometer, we analyse the interactions between canopy level reflectance and different stages of disturbance occurring in a mountain pine beetle infested lodgepole pine stand in northern interior British Columbia, Canada, during the 2007 growing season. Directional reflectance effects were modelled using a bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) acquired from high frequency multi-angular spectral observations. Key wavebands for observing changes in directionally corrected canopy spectra were identified using discriminant analysis and highly significant correlations between canopy reflectance and field measured disturbance levels were found for several broad and narrow waveband vegetation indices (for instance, r2NDVI=0.90; r2CHL3=0.85; p<0.05). Results indicate that multi-angular observations are useful for extraction of disturbance related changes in canopy reflectance, in particular the temporally and spectrally dense data detected changes in chlorophyll content well. This study will help guide and inform future efforts to map forest health conditions at landscape and over increasingly coarse scales.
0034-4257
421-434
Hilker, Thomas
c7fb75b8-320d-49df-84ba-96c9ee523d40
Coops, Nicholas C.
5511e778-fec2-4f54-8708-de65ba5a0992
Coggins, Samuel B.
73d382fc-8f38-4c45-a642-cc4fecc939b0
Wulder, Michael A.
13414360-db3d-4d88-a76d-ccffd69d0084
Brown, Mathew
9e9d1a67-3e40-486c-bedc-35332d977f50
Black, T. Andrew
f6187e30-d043-4094-b5ef-372c60de403b
Nesic, Zoran
a1581cdb-fcce-497b-ab4d-41d63e70bca2
Lessard, Dominic
d13d478c-29d2-4ac9-a3ae-3631679da03e
Hilker, Thomas
c7fb75b8-320d-49df-84ba-96c9ee523d40
Coops, Nicholas C.
5511e778-fec2-4f54-8708-de65ba5a0992
Coggins, Samuel B.
73d382fc-8f38-4c45-a642-cc4fecc939b0
Wulder, Michael A.
13414360-db3d-4d88-a76d-ccffd69d0084
Brown, Mathew
9e9d1a67-3e40-486c-bedc-35332d977f50
Black, T. Andrew
f6187e30-d043-4094-b5ef-372c60de403b
Nesic, Zoran
a1581cdb-fcce-497b-ab4d-41d63e70bca2
Lessard, Dominic
d13d478c-29d2-4ac9-a3ae-3631679da03e

Hilker, Thomas, Coops, Nicholas C., Coggins, Samuel B., Wulder, Michael A., Brown, Mathew, Black, T. Andrew, Nesic, Zoran and Lessard, Dominic (2009) Detection of foliage conditions and disturbance from multi-angular high spectral resolution remote sensing. Remote Sensing of Environment, 113 (2), 421-434. (doi:10.1016/j.rse.2008.10.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Disturbance of forest ecosystems, an important component of the terrestrial carbon cycle, has become a focus of research over recent years, as global warming is about to increase the frequency and severity of natural disturbance events. Remote sensing offers unique opportunities for detection of forest disturbance at multiple scales; however, spatially and temporally continuous mapping of non-stand replacing disturbance remains challenging. First, most high spatial resolution satellite sensors have relatively broad spectral ranges with bandwidths unsuitable for detection of subtle, stress induced, features in canopy reflectance. Second, directional and background reflectance effects, induced by the interactions between the sun-sensor geometry and the observed canopy surface, make up-scaling of empirically derived relationships between changes in spectral reflectance and vegetation conditions difficult. Using an automated tower based spectroradiometer, we analyse the interactions between canopy level reflectance and different stages of disturbance occurring in a mountain pine beetle infested lodgepole pine stand in northern interior British Columbia, Canada, during the 2007 growing season. Directional reflectance effects were modelled using a bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) acquired from high frequency multi-angular spectral observations. Key wavebands for observing changes in directionally corrected canopy spectra were identified using discriminant analysis and highly significant correlations between canopy reflectance and field measured disturbance levels were found for several broad and narrow waveband vegetation indices (for instance, r2NDVI=0.90; r2CHL3=0.85; p<0.05). Results indicate that multi-angular observations are useful for extraction of disturbance related changes in canopy reflectance, in particular the temporally and spectrally dense data detected changes in chlorophyll content well. This study will help guide and inform future efforts to map forest health conditions at landscape and over increasingly coarse scales.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 October 2008
Published date: 16 February 2009
Organisations: Earth Surface Dynamics

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Local EPrints ID: 384687
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/384687
ISSN: 0034-4257
PURE UUID: 11e0822e-8eb3-4ded-9b00-66452fee4830

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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2016 14:28
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:02

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Contributors

Author: Thomas Hilker
Author: Nicholas C. Coops
Author: Samuel B. Coggins
Author: Michael A. Wulder
Author: Mathew Brown
Author: T. Andrew Black
Author: Zoran Nesic
Author: Dominic Lessard

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