356 research outputs found

    Summaries of the Sixth Annual JPL Airborne Earth Science Workshop

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    This publication contains the summaries for the Sixth Annual JPL Airborne Earth Science Workshop, held in Pasadena, California, on March 4-8, 1996. The main workshop is divided into two smaller workshops as follows: (1) The Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) workshop, on March 4-6. The summaries for this workshop appear in Volume 1; (2) The Airborne Synthetic Aperture Radar (AIRSAR) workshop, on March 6-8. The summaries for this workshop appear in Volume 2

    Remote sensing in shallow lake ecology

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    Shallow lakes are an important ecological and socio-economic resource. However, the impact of human pressures, both at the lake and catchment scale, has precipitated a decline in the ecological status of many shallow lakes, both in the UK, and throughout Europe. There is now, as direct consequence, unprecedented interest in the assessment and monitoring of ecological status and trajectory in shallow lakes, not least in response to the European Union Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC). In this context, the spatially-resolving and panoramic data provided by remote sensing platforms may be of immense value in the construction of effective and efficient strategies for the assessment and monitoring of ecological status in shallow lakes and, moreover, in providing new, spatially-explicit, insights into the function of these ecosystems and how they respond to change. This thesis examined the use of remote sensing data for the assessment of (i) phytoplankton abundance and species composition and (ii) aquatic vegetation distribution and ecophysiological status in shallow lakes with a view to establishing the credence of such an approach and its value in limnological research and monitoring activities. High resolution in-situ and airborne remote sensing data was collected during a 2-year sampling campaign in the shallow lakes of the Norfolk Broads. It was demonstrated that semi-empirical algorithms could be formulated and used to provide accurate and robust estimations of the concentration of chlorophyll-a, even in these optically-complex waters. It was further shown that it was possible to differentiate and quantify the abundance of cyanobacteria using the biomarker pigment C-phycocyanin. The subsequent calibration of the imagery obtained from the airborne reconnaissance missions permitted the construction of diurnal and seasonal regional-scale time-series of phytoplankton dynamics in the Norfolk Broads. This approach was able to deliver unique spatial insights into the migratory behaviour of a potentially-toxic cyanobacterial bloom. It was further shown that remote sensing can be used to map the distribution of aquatic plants in shallow lakes, importantly including the extent of submerged vegetation, which is central to the assessment of ecological status. This research theme was subsequently extended in an exploration of the use of remote sensing for assessing the ecophysiological response of wetland plants to nutrient enrichment. It was shown that remote sensing metrics could be constructed for the quantification of plant vigour. The extrapolation of these techniques enabled spatial heterogeneity in the ecophysiological response of Phragmites australis to lake nutrient enrichment to be characterised and assisted the formulation of a mechanistic explanation for the variation in reedswamp performance in these shallow lakes. It is therefore argued that the spatially synoptic data provided by remote sensing has much to offer the assessment, monitoring and policing of ecological status in shallow lakes and, in particular, for facilitating the development of pan-European scale lake surveillance capabilities for the Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC). It is also suggested that remote sensing can make a valuable contribution to furthering ecological understanding and, most significantly, in enabling ecosystem processes and functions to be examined at the lake-scale

    Summaries of the Fifth Annual JPL Airborne Earth Science Workshop. Volume 1: AVIRIS Workshop

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    This publication is the first of three containing summaries for the Fifth Annual JPL Airborne Earth Science Workshop, held in Pasadena, California, on January 23-26, 1995. The main workshop is divided into three smaller workshops as follows: (1) The Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) workshop, on January 23-24. The summaries for this workshop appear in this volume; (2) The Airborne Synthetic Aperture Radar (AIRSAR) workshop, on January 25-26. The summaries for this workshop appear in Volume 3; and (3) The Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS) workshop, on January 26. The summaries for this workshop appear in Volume 2

    Depth Estimation of Submerged Aquatic Vegetation in Clear Water Streams Using Low-Altitude Optical Remote Sensing

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    UAVs and other low-altitude remote sensing platforms are proving very useful tools for remote sensing of river systems. Currently consumer grade cameras are still the most commonly used sensors for this purpose. In particular, progress is being made to obtain river bathymetry from the optical image data collected with such cameras, using the strong attenuation of light in water. No studies have yet applied this method to map submergence depth of aquatic vegetation, which has rather different reflectance characteristics from river bed substrate. This study therefore looked at the possibilities to use the optical image data to map submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) depth in shallow clear water streams. We first applied the Optimal Band Ratio Analysis method (OBRA) of Legleiter et al. (2009) to a dataset of spectral signatures from three macrophyte species in a clear water stream. The results showed that for each species the ratio of certain wavelengths were strongly associated with depth. A combined assessment of all species resulted in equally strong associations, indicating that the effect of spectral variation in vegetation is subsidiary to spectral variation due to depth changes. Strongest associations (R2-values ranging from 0.67 to 0.90 for different species) were found for combinations including one band in the near infrared (NIR) region between 825 and 925 nm and one band in the visible light region. Currently data of both high spatial and spectral resolution is not commonly available to apply the OBRA results directly to image data for SAV depth mapping. Instead a novel, low-cost data acquisition method was used to obtain six-band high spatial resolution image composites using a NIR sensitive DSLR camera. A field dataset of SAV submergence depths was used to develop regression models for the mapping of submergence depth from image pixel values. Band (combinations) providing the best performing models (R2-values up to 0.77) corresponded with the OBRA findings. A 10% error was achieved under sub-optimal data collection conditions, which indicates that the method could be suitable for many SAV mapping applications

    Combining hyperspectral UAV and mulitspectral FORMOSAT-2 imagery for precision agriculture applications

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    Precision agriculture requires detailed information regarding the crop status variability within a field. Remote sensing provides an efficient way to obtain such information through observing biophysical parameters, such as canopy nitrogen content, leaf coverage, and plant biomass. However, individual remote sensing sensors often fail to provide information which meets the spatial and temporal resolution required by precision agriculture. The purpose of this study is to investigate methods which can be used to combine imagery from various sensors in order to create a new dataset which comes closer to meeting these requirements. More specifically, this study combined multispectral satellite imagery (Formosat-2) and hyperspectral Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) imagery of a potato field in the Netherlands. The imagery from both platforms was combined in two ways. Firstly, data fusion methods brought the spatial resolution of the Formosat-2 imagery (8 m) down to the spatial resolution of the UAV imagery (1 m). Two data fusion methods were applied: an unmixing-based algorithm and the Spatial and Temporal Adaptive Reflectance Fusion Model (STARFM). The unmixing-based method produced vegetation indices which were highly correlated to the measured LAI (rs= 0.866) and canopy chlorophyll values (rs=0.884), whereas the STARFM obtained lower correlations. Secondly, a Spectral-Temporal Reflectance Surface (STRS) was constructed to interpolate a daily 101 band reflectance spectra using both sources of imagery. A novel STRS method was presented, which utilizes Bayesian theory to obtain realistic spectra and accounts for sensor uncertainties. The resulting surface obtained a high correlation to LAI (rs=0.858) and canopy chlorophyll (rs=0.788) measurements at field level. The multi-sensor datasets were able to characterize significant differences of crop status due to differing nitrogen fertilization regimes from June to August. Meanwhile, the yield prediction models based purely on the vegetation indices extracted from the unmixing-based fusion dataset explained 52.7% of the yield variation, whereas the STRS dataset was able to explain 72.9% of the yield variability. The results of the current study indicate that the limitations of each individual sensor can be largely surpassed by combining multiple sources of imagery, which is beneficial for agricultural management. Further research could focus on the integration of data fusion and STRS techniques, and the inclusion of imagery from additional sensors.Samenvatting In een wereld waar toekomstige voedselzekerheid bedreigd wordt, biedt precisielandbouw een oplossing die de oogst kan maximaliseren terwijl de economische en ecologische kosten van voedselproductie beperkt worden. Om dit te kunnen doen is gedetailleerde informatie over de staat van het gewas nodig. Remote sensing is een manier om biofysische informatie, waaronder stikstof gehaltes en biomassa, te verkrijgen. De informatie van een individuele sensor is echter vaak niet genoeg om aan de hoge eisen betreft ruimtelijke en temporele resolutie te voldoen. Deze studie combineert daarom de informatie afkomstig van verschillende sensoren, namelijk multispectrale satelliet beelden (Formosat-2) en hyperspectral Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) beelden van een aardappel veld, in een poging om aan de hoge informatie eisen van precisielandbouw te voldoen. Ten eerste werd gebruik gemaakt van datafusie om de acht Formosat-2 beelden met een resolutie van 8 m te combineren met de vier UAV beelden met een resolutie van 1 m. De resulterende dataset bestaat uit acht beelden met een resolutie van 1 m. Twee methodes werden toegepast, de zogenaamde STARFM methode en een unmixing-based methode. De unmixing-based methode produceerde beelden met een hoge correlatie op de Leaf Area Index (LAI) (rs= 0.866) en chlorofyl gehalte (rs=0.884) gemeten op veldnieveau. De STARFM methode presteerde slechter, met correlaties van respectievelijk rs=0.477 en rs=0.431. Ten tweede werden Spectral-Temporal Reflectance Surfaces (STRSs) ontwikkeld die een dagelijks spectrum weergeven met 101 spectrale banden. Om dit te doen is een nieuwe STRS methode gebaseerd op de Bayesiaanse theorie ontwikkeld. Deze produceert realistische spectra met een overeenkomstige onzekerheid. Deze STRSs vertoonden hoge correlaties met de LAI (rs=0.858) en het chlorofyl gehalte (rs=0.788) gemeten op veldnieveau. De bruikbaarheid van deze twee soorten datasets werd geanalyseerd door middel van de berekening van een aantal vegetatie-indexen. De resultaten tonen dat de multi-sensor datasets capabel zijn om significante verschillen in de groei van gewassen vast te stellen tijdens het groeiseizoen zelf. Bovendien werden regressiemodellen toegepast om de bruikbaarheid van de datasets voor oogst voorspellingen. De unmixing-based datafusie verklaarde 52.7% van de variatie in oogst, terwijl de STRS 72.9% van de variabiliteit verklaarden. De resultaten van het huidige onderzoek tonen aan dat de beperkingen van een individuele sensor grotendeels overtroffen kunnen worden door het gebruik van meerdere sensoren. Het combineren van verschillende sensoren, of het nu Formosat-2 en UAV beelden zijn of andere ruimtelijke informatiebronnen, kan de hoge informatie eisen van de precisielandbouw tegemoet komen.In the context of threatened global food security, precision agriculture is one strategy to maximize yield to meet the increased demands of food, while minimizing both economic and environmental costs of food production. This is done by applying variable management strategies, which means the fertilizer or irrigation rates within a field are adjusted according to the crop needs in that specific part of the field. This implies that accurate crop status information must be available regularly for many different points in the field. Remote sensing can provide this information, but it is difficult to meet the information requirements when using only one sensor. For example, satellites collect imagery regularly and over large areas, but may be blocked by clouds. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones, are more flexible but have higher operational costs. The purpose of this study was to use fusion methods to combine satellite (Formosat-2) with UAV imagery of a potato field in the Netherlands. Firstly, data fusion was applied. The eight Formosat-2 images with 8 m x 8 m pixels were combined with four UAV images with 1 m x 1 m pixels to obtain a new dataset of eight images with 1 m x 1 m pixels. Unmixing-based data fusion produced images which had a high correlation to field measurements obtained from the potato field during the growing season. The results of a second data fusion method, STARFM, were less reliable in this study. The UAV images were hyperspectral, meaning they contained very detailed information spanning a large part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Much of this information was lost in the data fusion methods because the Formosat-2 images were multispectral, representing a more limited portion of the spectrum. Therefore, a second analysis investigated the use of Spectral-Temporal Reflectance Surfaces (STRS), which allow information from different portions of the electromagnetic spectrum to be combined. These STRS provided daily hyperspectral observations, which were also verified as accurate by comparing them to reference data. Finally, this study demonstrated the ability of both data fusion and STRS to identify which parts of the potato field had lower photosynthetic production during the growing season. Data fusion was capable of explaining 52.7% of the yield variation through regression models, whereas the STRS explained 72.9%. To conclude, this study indicates how to combine crop status information from different sensors to support precision agriculture management decisions

    Remote sensing and bio-geo-optical properties of turbid, productive inland waters: a case study of Lake Balaton

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    Algal blooms plague freshwaters across the globe, as increased nutrient loads lead to eutrophication of inland waters and the presence of potentially harmful cyanobacteria. In this context, remote sensing is a valuable approach to monitor water quality over broad temporal and spatial scales. However, there remain several challenges to the accurate retrieval of water quality parameters, and the research in this thesis investigates these in an optically complex lake (Lake Balaton, Hungary). This study found that bulk and specific inherent optical properties [(S)IOPs] showed significant spatial variability over the trophic gradient in Lake Balaton. The relationships between (S)IOPs and biogeochemical parameters differed from those reported in ocean and coastal waters due to the high proportion of particulate inorganic matter (PIM). Furthermore, wind-driven resuspension of mineral sediments attributed a high proportion of total attenuation to particulate scattering and increased the mean refractive index (n̅p) of the particle assemblage. Phytoplankton pigment concentrations [chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) and phycocyanin (PC)] were also accurately retrieved from a times series of satellite data over Lake Balaton using semi-analytical algorithms. Conincident (S)IOP data allowed for investigation of the errors within these algorithms, indicating overestimation of phytoplankton absorption [aph(665)] and underestimation of the Chl-a specific absorption coefficient [a*ph(665)]. Finally, Chl-a concentrations were accurately retrieved in a multiscale remote sensing study using the Normalized Difference Chlorophyll Index (NDCI), indicating hyperspectral data is not necessary to retrieve accurate pigment concentrations but does capture the subtle heterogeneity of phytoplankton spatial distribution. The results of this thesis provide a positive outlook for the future of inland water remote sensing, particularly in light of contemporary satellite instruments with continued or improved radiometric, spectral, spatial and temporal coverage. Furthermore, the value of coincident (S)IOP data is highlighted and contributes towards the improvement of remote sensing pigment retrieval in optically complex waters

    Feasibility Study for an Aquatic Ecosystem Earth Observing System Version 1.2.

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    International audienceMany Earth observing sensors have been designed, built and launched with primary objectives of either terrestrial or ocean remote sensing applications. Often the data from these sensors are also used for freshwater, estuarine and coastal water quality observations, bathymetry and benthic mapping. However, such land and ocean specific sensors are not designed for these complex aquatic environments and consequently are not likely to perform as well as a dedicated sensor would. As a CEOS action, CSIRO and DLR have taken the lead on a feasibility assessment to determine the benefits and technological difficulties of designing an Earth observing satellite mission focused on the biogeochemistry of inland, estuarine, deltaic and near coastal waters as well as mapping macrophytes, macro-algae, sea grasses and coral reefs. These environments need higher spatial resolution than current and planned ocean colour sensors offer and need higher spectral resolution than current and planned land Earth observing sensors offer (with the exception of several R&D type imaging spectrometry satellite missions). The results indicate that a dedicated sensor of (non-oceanic) aquatic ecosystems could be a multispectral sensor with ~26 bands in the 380-780 nm wavelength range for retrieving the aquatic ecosystem variables as well as another 15 spectral bands between 360-380 nm and 780-1400 nm for removing atmospheric and air-water interface effects. These requirements are very close to defining an imaging spectrometer with spectral bands between 360 and 1000 nm (suitable for Si based detectors), possibly augmented by a SWIR imaging spectrometer. In that case the spectral bands would ideally have 5 nm spacing and Full Width Half Maximum (FWHM), although it may be necessary to go to 8 nm wide spectral bands (between 380 to 780nm where the fine spectral features occur -mainly due to photosynthetic or accessory pigments) to obtain enough signal to noise. The spatial resolution of such a global mapping mission would be between ~17 and ~33 m enabling imaging of the vast majority of water bodies (lakes, reservoirs, lagoons, estuaries etc.) larger than 0.2 ha and ~25% of river reaches globally (at ~17 m resolution) whilst maintaining sufficient radiometric resolution

    Linking Canopy Reflectance and Plant Functioning through Radiative Transfer Models

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    Von den Tropen bis zur Tundra hat sich die Pflanzenwelt durch Anpassungen an lokale UmwelteinflĂŒsse diversifiziert. Diese Anpassungen sind in der Funktionsweise der Pflanzen manifestiert, welche unter anderem Wachstum, Fortpflanzung, KonkurrenzfĂ€higkeit oder Ausdauer beinhalten. Pflanzenfunktionen haben nicht nur direkten Einfluss auf die Artenzusammensetzung, sondern auch auf großrĂ€umige Prozesse wie Bio- und AtmossphĂ€reninteraktionen oder StoffkreislĂ€ufe. Folglich wurden viele Forschungsanstrengungen unternommen um Pflanzenfunktionen weiter zu verstehen und zu erfassen, z.B. darauf abzielend generalisierende Modelle von Pflanzenfunktionen zu entwickeln oder individuelle Pflanzenmerkmale als Indikatoren fĂŒr Pflanzenfunktion zu identifizieren. Trotz der wissenschaftlichen Fortschritte fehlt ein vollstĂ€ndiges Bild der Funktionsvielfalt der Pflanzenwelt, sowohl in geographischer als auch funktioneller Hinsicht. Dies ist im Wesentlichen auf die KomplexitĂ€t und die logistischen EinschrĂ€nkungen bei der Messung von Pflanzenfunktionen im Feld zurĂŒckzufĂŒhren. Um dieses Bild zu vervollstĂ€ndigen wird insbesondere optischen Erdbeobachtungsdaten ein hohes Potenzial zugeschrieben. Optische Erdbeobachtungssensoren erfassen das vom Kronendach reflektierte Sonnenlicht. Letzteres wird durch verschiedene biochemische und strukturelle Pflanzenmerkmale (im Folgenden optische Merkmale) beeintrĂ€chtigt (z.B. Blattchlorophyllgehalt oder Blattwinkel). Das Abfangen und Absorbieren von Sonnenlicht ist die Grundlage des pflanzeneigenen Metabolismus und folglich liegt es Nahe, dass diese optischen Merkmale direkt mit Pflanzenfunktionen zusammenhĂ€ngen. Der Zusammenhang dieser optische Merkmale mit Pflanzenfunktionen wurde jedoch noch nicht systematisch untersucht, und ebenso ist der Zusammenhang zwischen Pflanzenfunktion und Kronendachreflektion noch nicht vollstĂ€ndig untersucht. Die physikalischen Interaktionen von Licht und optischen Pflanzenmerkmalen sind bereits hinreichend verstanden und in Strahlungstransfermodellen (RTM) fĂŒr VegetationskronendĂ€cher formuliert. RTM können als prozessbasierte Modelle betrachtet werden, die die Reflektion des Kronendachs in AbhĂ€ngigkeit von optische Merkmalen, dem Bodenhintergrund und der Sonnen-Sensorgeometrie modellieren. Das Ziel und die Innovation dieser Dissertation war die kausalen ZusammenhĂ€nge zwischen Kronendachreflektion und Pflanzenfunktion mittels RTM zu verstehen und zu nutzen. Es wurde gezeigt, dass fĂŒr die Fernerkundung von Pflanzenfunktionen die Kopplung von Kronendachreflektion und Pflanzenfunktionen durch RTM mehrere Potentiale bietet: Erstens, ermöglichen RTM die Kartierung von Pflanzenmerkmalen. Innerhalb einer Fallstudie wurde gezeigt, dass eine Inversion von RTM mit hyperspektralen Daten eine Kartierung von optischen Merkmalen erlaubt, fĂŒr die keine Felddaten zur Modellkalibrierung benötigt werden. Die kartierten Merkmale zeigten eine hohe Übereinstimmung mit MerkmalsausprĂ€gungen aus unabhĂ€ngigen Datenbanken und spiegelten die im Feld gemessenen ökologischen Gradienten wider. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass RTM-Inversion als Ă€ußerst ĂŒbertragbare Methode betrachtet werden kann, um rĂ€umliche Karten von Pflanzenmerkmalen zu erstellen, die als Proxies fĂŒr Pflanzenfunktionen dienen können. Allerdings erfordert die Implementierung von RTM Inversionen fundierte Kenntnisse ĂŒber die Prinzipien der Strahlentransfermodellierung und der zu untersuchenden Vegetationscharakteristiken. Zweitens, ermöglichen RTM die Untersuchung von ZusammenhĂ€ngen zwischen Pflanzenfunktion und der Kronendachreflektion. In der vorliegenden Thesis wurden simulierte Kronendachspektren aus einem RTM verwendet, um den Beitrag der optischen Merkmale zu den spektralen Unterschieden zwischen Pflanzenfunktionstypen zu erfassen. Die Ergebnisse zeigten die dominanten Pflanzenmerkmale und die entsprechenden spektralen Charakteristiken die fĂŒr eine fernerkundliche Unterscheidung der Pflanzenfunktion von großer Relevanz sind. DarĂŒber hinaus wurde gezeigt, dass RTM-basierte Simulationen EinschrĂ€nkungen von Fallstudien kompensieren und Kenntnisse ĂŒber die ZusammenhĂ€nge von Pflanzenfunktionen, Pflanzeneigenschaften und Kronendachtreflektion erweitern können. Diese Kenntnisse bilden die Grundlage fĂŒr die Entwicklung und Verbesserung von Sensoren und Algorithmen zur Fernerkundung von Pflanzenfunktionen. Drittens, erweitern RTM und die darin enthaltenen optischen Merkmale unsere Möglichkeiten Unterschiede in der Pflanzenfunktion zu verstehen und zu quantifizieren. Mit Hilfe von in-situ gemessenen MerkmalsausprĂ€gungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die in RTM enthaltenen optischen Merkmale kausal mit primĂ€ren Pflanzenfunktionen zusammenhĂ€ngen. Dies wiederum bedeutet, dass die Reflexion des Kronendachs unmittelbar mit den primĂ€ren Funktionen der Pflanze zusammenhĂ€ngt (‘Reflektion folgt Funktion’). DarĂŒber hinaus wurde festgestellt, dass optische Merkmale vergleichbare oder sogar höhere Korrelationen mit den verwendeten pflanzlichen Funktionsgradienten aufweisen als die in der Pflanzenökologie ĂŒblich verwendeten Merkmale. Entsprechend bieten RTM sowohl eine alternative Perspektive als auch ein Set von Pflanzenmerkmalen mit denen Unterschiede der Pflanzenfunktion charakterisiert und quantifiziert werden können. Diese Merkmale können somit als wertvolle ErgĂ€nzung oder Alternative zu den in der Pflanzenökologie ĂŒblichen Merkmalen dienen. Zusammengefasst zeigt diese Thesis, dass RTM unsere Möglichkeiten erweiterten können die funktionelle Vielfalt der globalen Vegetationsbedeckung weiter zu verstehen und zu erfassen und fĂŒhrt zukunftsrelevante Forschungspotentiale auf
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