73 research outputs found

    Leafing patterns and drivers across seasonally dry tropical communities

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    Investigating the timing of key phenological events across environments with variable seasonality is crucial to understand the drivers of ecosystem dynamics. Leaf production in the tropics is mainly constrained by water and light availability. Identifying the factors regulating leaf phenology patterns allows efficiently forecasting of climate change impacts. We conducted a novel phenological monitoring study across four Neotropical vegetation sites using leaf phenology time series obtained from digital repeated photographs (phenocameras). Seasonality differed among sites, from very seasonally dry climate in the caatinga dry scrubland with an eight-month long dry season to the less restrictive Cerrado vegetation with a six-month dry season. To unravel the main drivers of leaf phenology and understand how they influence seasonal dynamics (represented by the green color channel (Gcc) vegetation index), we applied Generalized Additive Mixed Models (GAMMs) to estimate the growing seasons, using water deficit and day length as covariates. Our results indicated that plant-water relationships are more important in the caatinga, while light (measured as day-length) was more relevant in explaining leafing patterns in Cerrado communities. Leafing behaviors and predictor-response relationships (distinct smooth functions) were more variable at the less seasonal Cerrado sites, suggesting that different life-forms (grasses, herbs, shrubs, and trees) are capable of overcoming drought through specific phenological strategies and associated functional traits, such as deep root systems in trees

    RadialPheno: A tool for near-surface phenology analysis through radial layouts

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    Premise Increasingly, researchers studying plant phenology are exploring novel technologies to remotely observe plant changes over time. The increasing use of phenocams to monitor leaf phenology, based on the analysis of indices extracted from sequences of daily digital vegetation images, has demanded the development of appropriate tools for data visualization and analysis. Here, we describe RadialPheno, a tool that uses radial layouts to represent time series from digital repeat photographs, and applies them to the analysis of leafing patterns and leaf exchange strategies of different vegetations. Methods and Results We developed a web tool, RadialPheno, provided with the R and Shiny environments, which uses radial visual structures to represent cyclical multidimensional temporal data associated with digital image time series. We demonstrate the application of our methods and tool for a savanna vegetation phenology in the Brazilian Cerrado. We visually represented the greenness index extracted from sequential imagery using the RadialPheno tool. Conclusions RadialPheno was successfully applied for the visualization and interpretation of individual, species, and community long-term leafing phenology data associated with near-surface phenological observations of Cerrado vegetation. RadialPheno was also effective for intercomparisons of ground-based direct visual observations and camera-derived phenology observations

    Visualização de padrões temporais cíclicos em estudos de fenologia

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    Orientadores: Ricardo da Silva Torres, Leonor Patrícia Cerdeira MorellatoTese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de ComputaçãoResumo: Em diversas aplicações, grandes volumes de dados multidimensionais têm sido gerados continuamente ao longo do tempo. Uma abordagem adequada para lidar com estas coleções consiste no uso de métodos de visualização de informação, a partir dos quais padrões de interesse podem ser identificados, possibilitando o entendimento de fenômenos temporais complexos. De fato, em diversos domínios, o desenvolvimento de ferramentas adequadas para apoiar análises complexas, por exemplo, aquelas baseadas na identificação de padrões de mudanças ou correlações existentes entre múltiplas variáveis ao longo do tempo é de suma importância. Em estudos de fenologia, por exemplo, especialistas observam as mudanças que ocorrem ao longo da vida de plantas e animais e investigam qual é a relação entre essas mudanças com variáveis ambientais. Neste cenário, especialistas em fenologia cada vez mais precisam de ferramentas para, adequadamente, visualizar séries temporais longas, com muitas variáveis e de diferentes tipos (por exemplo, texto e imagem), assim como identificar padrões temporais cíclicos. Embora diversas abordagens tenham sido propostas para visualizar dados que variam ao longo do tempo, muitas não são apropriadas ou aplicáveis para dados de fenologia, porque não são capazes de: (i) lidar com séries temporais longas, com muitas variáveis de diferentes tipos de dados e de uma ou mais dimensões; e (ii) permitir a identificação de padrões temporais cíclicos e drivers ambientais associados. Este trabalho aborda essas questões a partir da proposta de duas novas abordagens para apoiar a análise e visualização de dados temporais multidimensionais. Nossa primeira proposta combina estruturas visuais radiais com ritmos visuais. As estruturas radiais são usadas para fornecer informação contextual sobre fenômenos cíclicos, enquanto que o ritmo visual é usado para sumarizar séries temporais longas em representações compactas. Nós desenvolvemos, avaliamos e validamos nossa proposta com especialistas em fenologia em tarefas relacionadas à visualização de dados de observação direta da fenologia de plantas em nível tanto de indivíduos quanto de espécies. Nós também validamos a proposta usando dados temporais relacionados a imagens obtidas de sistemas de monitoramento de vegetação próxima à superfície. Nossa segunda abordagem é uma nova representação baseada em imagem, chamada Change Frequency Heatmap (CFH), usada para codificar mudanças temporais de dados numéricos multivariados. O método calcula histogramas de padrões de mudanças observados em sucessivos instantes de tempo. Nós validamos o uso do CFH a partir da criação de uma ferramenta de caracterização de mudanças no ciclo de vida de plantas de múltiplos indivíduos e espécies ao longo do tempo. Nós demonstramos o potencial do CFH para ajudar na identificação visual de padrões de mudanças temporais complexas, especialmente na identificação de variações entre indivíduos em estudos relacionados à fenologia de plantasAbstract: In several applications, large volumes of multidimensional data have been generated continuously over time. One suitable approach for handling those collections in a meaningful way consists in the use of information visualization methods, based on which patterns of interest can be identified, triggering the understanding of complex temporal phenomena. In fact, in several domains, the development of appropriate tools for supporting complex analysis based, for example, on the identification of change patterns in temporal data or existing correlations, over time, among multiple variables, is of paramount importance. In phenology studies, for instance, phenologists observe changes in the development of plants and animals throughout their lives and investigate what is the relationship between these changes with environmental changes. Therefore, phenologists increasingly need tools for visualizing appropriately long-term series with many variables of different data types, as well as for identifying cyclical temporal patterns. Although several approaches have been proposed to visualize data varying over time, most of them are not appropriate or applicable to phenology data, because they are not able: (i) to handle long-term series with many variables of different data types and one or more dimensions and (ii) to support the identification of cyclical temporal patterns and associated environmental drivers. This work addresses these shortcomings by presenting two new approaches to support the analysis and visualization of multidimensional temporal data. Our first proposal to visualize phenological data combines radial visual structures along with visual rhythms. Radial visual structures are used to provide contextual insights regarding cyclical phenomena, while the visual rhythm encoding is used to summarize long-term time series into compact representations. We developed, evaluated, and validated our proposal with phenology experts using plant phenology direct observational data both at individuals and species levels. Also we validated the proposal using image-related temporal data obtained from near-surface vegetation monitoring systems. Our second approach is a novel image-based representation, named Change Frequency Heatmap (CFH), used to encode temporal changes of multivariate numerical data. The method computes histograms of change patterns observed at successive timestamps. We validated the use of CFHs through the creation of a temporal change characterization tool to support complex plant phenology analysis, concerning the characterization of plant life cycle changes of multiple individuals and species over time. We demonstrated the potential of CFH to support visual identification of complex temporal change patterns, especially to decipher interindividual variations in plant phenologyDoutoradoCiência da ComputaçãoDoutora em Ciência da Computação162312/2015-62013/501550-0CNPQCAPESFAPES

    Rethinking tropical phenology: insights from long‐term monitoring and novel analytical methods

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    Here, we introduce the Special Section (SS) on long‐term monitoring and new analytical methods in tropical phenology. The SS puts together nine original papers plus a synthesis, bringing significant advances and new insights into our understanding of tropical phenology across Africa and tropical America. The papers address environmental cues, methodological shortcomings, and provide innovative analytical approaches, opening new pathways, perspective and applications of tropical phenology for forest management and environmental monitoring. The SS is a substantial step toward a more comprehensive overview of trends in tropical phenology, as seven of nine studies evaluate >10‐yr data sets applying new methods of analysis such as hierarchical Bayesian models, generalized additive models, and Fourier analysis. We argue that it is essential to maintain ongoing monitoring programs and build a tropical phenology network at least for long‐term (>10 yr) study sites, providing the means for national and international financial support. Cross‐continental comparisons are now a primary goal, as we work toward a global vision of trends and shifts in tropical phenology in the Anthropocene

    Remote Sensing of Savannas and Woodlands

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    Savannas and woodlands are one of the most challenging targets for remote sensing. This book provides a current snapshot of the geographical focus and application of the latest sensors and sensor combinations in savannas and woodlands. It includes feature articles on terrestrial laser scanning and on the application of remote sensing to characterization of vegetation dynamics in the Mato Grosso, Cerrado and Caatinga of Brazil. It also contains studies focussed on savannas in Europe, North America, Africa and Australia. It should be important reading for environmental practitioners and scientists globally who are concerned with the sustainability of the global savanna and woodland biome

    Linking plant phenology to conservation biology

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    Phenology has achieved a prominent position in current scenarios of global change research given its role inmonitoring and predicting the timing of recurrent life cycle events. However, the implications of phenology to environmental conservation and management remain poorly explored. Here,we present the first explicit appraisal of howphenology-amultidisciplinary science encompassing biometeorology, ecology, and evolutionary biology- can make a key contribution to contemporary conservation biology. We focus on shifts in plant phenology induced by global change, their impacts on species diversity and plant-animal interactions in the tropics, and how conservation efforts could be enhanced in relation to plant resource organization. We identify the effects of phenological changes and mismatches in the maintenance and conservation of mutualistic interactions, and examine how phenological research can contribute to evaluate, manage and mitigate the consequences of land-use change and other natural and anthropogenic disturbances, such as fire, exotic and invasive species. Wealso identify cutting-edge tools that can improve the spatial and temporal coverage of phenological monitoring, from satellites to drones and digital cameras. We highlight the role of historical information in recovering long-term phenological time series, and track climate-related shifts in tropical systems. Finally, we propose a set of measures to boost the contribution of phenology to conservation science.Weadvocate the inclusion of phenology into predictive models integrating evolutionary history to identify species groups that are either resilient or sensitive to future climate-change scenarios, and understand how phenological m ismatches can affect community dynamics, ecosystem services, and conservation over time

    A Change-Driven Image Foveation Approach for Tracking Plant Phenology

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    One of the challenges in remote phenology studies lies in how to efficiently manage large volumes of data obtained as long-term sequences of high-resolution images. A promising approach is known as image foveation, which is able to reduce the computational resources used (i.e., memory storage) in several applications. In this paper, we propose an image foveation approach towards plant phenology tracking where relevant changes within an image time series guide the creation of foveal models used to resample unseen images. By doing so, images are taken to a space-variant domain where regions vary in resolution according to their contextual relevance for the application. We performed our validation on a dataset of vegetation image sequences previously used in plant phenology studies

    Automated Processing of Webcam Images for Phenological Classification

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    Along with the global climate change, there is an increasing interest for its effect on phenological patterns such as start and end of the growing season. Scientific digital webcams are used for this purpose taking every day one or more images from the same natural motive showing for example trees or grassland sites. To derive phenological patterns from the webcam images, regions of interest are manually defined on these images by an expert and subsequently a time series of percentage greenness is derived and analyzed with respect to structural changes. While this standard approach leads to satisfying results and allows to determine dates of phenological change points, it is associated with a considerable amount of manual work and is therefore constrained to a limited number of webcams only. In particular, this forbids to apply the phenological analysis to a large network of publicly accessible webcams in order to capture spatial phenological variation. In order to be able to scale up the analysis to several hundreds or thousands of webcams, we propose and evaluate two automated alternatives for the definition of regions of interest, allowing for efficient analyses of webcam images. A semi-supervised approach selects pixels based on the correlation of the pixels’ time series of percentage greenness with a few prototype pixels. An unsupervised approach clusters pixels based on scores of a singular value decomposition. We show for a scientific webcam that the resulting regions of interest are at least as informative as those chosen by an expert with the advantage that no manual action is required. Additionally, we show that the methods can even be applied to publicly available webcams accessed via the internet yielding interesting partitions of the analyzed images. Finally, we show that the methods are suitable for the intended big data applications by analyzing 13988 webcams from the AMOS database. All developed methods are implemented in the statistical software package R and publicly available in the R package phenofun. Executable example code is provided as supplementary material

    Monitoring mega-crown leaf turnover from space

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    Spatial and temporal patterns of tropical leaf renewal are poorly understood and poorly parameterized in modern Earth System Models due to lack of data. Remote sensing has great potential for sampling leaf phenology across tropical landscapes but until now has been impeded by lack of ground-truthing, cloudiness, poor spatial resolution, and the cryptic nature of incremental leaf turnover in many tropical plants. To our knowledge, satellite data have never been used to monitor individual crown leaf phenology in the tropics, an innovation that would be a major breakthrough for individual and species-level ecology and improve climate change predictions for the tropics. In this paper, we assessed whether satellite data can detect leaf turnover for individual trees using ground observations of a candidate tropical tree species, Moabi (Baillonella toxisperma), which has a mega-crown visible from space. We identified and delineated Moabi crowns at Lopé NP, Gabon from satellite imagery using ground coordinates and extracted high spatial and temporal resolution, optical, and synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) timeseries data for each tree. We normalized these data relative to the surrounding forest canopy and combined them with concurrent monthly crown observations of new, mature, and senescent leaves recorded from the ground. We analyzed the relationship between satellite and ground observations using generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs). Ground observations of leaf turnover were significantly correlated with optical indices derived from Sentinel-2 optical data (the normalized difference vegetation index and the green leaf index), but not with SAR data derived from Sentinel-1. We demonstrate, perhaps for the first time, how the leaf phenology of individual large-canopied tropical trees can directly influence the spectral signature of satellite pixels through time. Additionally, while the level of uncertainty in our model predictions is still very high, we believe this study shows that we are near the threshold for orbital monitoring of individual crowns within tropical forests, even in challenging locations, such as cloudy Gabon. Further technical advances in remote sensing instruments into the spatial and temporal scales relevant to organismal biological processes will unlock great potential to improve our understanding of the Earth system
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