Mapping leaf chlorophyll content from Sentinel-2 and RapidEye data in spruce stands using the invertible forest reflectance model

Darvishzadeh, Roshanak Skidmore, Andrew Abdullah, Haidi Cherenet, Elias Ali, Abebe Wang, Tiejun Nieuwenhuis, Willem Heurich, Marco Vrieling, Anton O'Connor, Brian Paganini, Marc

Mapping leaf chlorophyll content from Sentinel-2 and RapidEye data in spruce stands using the invertible forest reflectance model

Darvishzadeh, Roshanak 1Skidmore, Andrew 1Abdullah, Haidi 1Cherenet, Elias 2Ali, Abebe 1Wang, Tiejun 1Nieuwenhuis, Willem 1Heurich, Marco 3Vrieling, Anton 1O'Connor, Brian 4Paganini, Marc5
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作者信息

  • 1. Univ Twente, Fac Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat ITC, POB 217, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands
  • 2. Haramaya Univ, Dept Geoinformat Sci, POB 138, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia
  • 3. Bavarian Forest Natl Pk, Dept Visitor Management, D-94481 Grafenau, Germany
  • 4. UN Environm World Conservat Monitoring Ctr, 219 Huntingdon Rd, Cambridge CB3 0DL, England
  • 5. European Space Agcy, ESRIN, Via Galileo Galilei,Casella Postale 64, I-00044 Frascati, RM, Italy
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Abstract

Leaf chlorophyll plays an essential role in controlling photosynthesis, physiological activities and forest health. In this study, the performance of Sentinel-2 and RapidEye satellite data and the Invertible Forest Reflectance Model (INFORM) radiative transfer model (RTM) for retrieving and mapping of leaf chlorophyll content in the Norway spruce (Picea abies) stands of a temperate forest was evaluated. Biochemical properties of leaf samples as well as stand structural characteristics were collected in two subsequent field campaigns during July 2015 and 2016 in the Bavarian Forest National Park (BFNP), Germany, parallel with the timing of the RapidEye and Sentinel-2 images. Leaf chlorophyll was measured both destructively and nondestructively using wet chemical spectrophotometry analysis and a hand-held chlorophyll content meter. The INFORM was utilised in the forward mode to generate two lookup tables (LUTs) in the spectral band settings of RapidEye and Sentinel-2 data using information obtained from the field campaigns. Before generating the LUTs, the sensitivity of the model input parameters to the spectral data from RapidEye and Sentinel-2 were examined. The canopy reflectance of the studied plots were obtained from the satellite images and used as input for the inversion of LUTs. The coefficient of determination (R-2), root mean square errors (RMSE), and the normalised root mean square errors (NRMSE), between the retrieved and measured leaf chlorophyll, were then used to examine the attained results from RapidEye and Sentinel-2 data, respectively. The use of multiple solutions and spectral subsets for the inversion process were further investigated to enhance the retrieval accuracy of foliar chlorophyll. The result of the sensitivity analysis demonstrated that the simulated canopy reflectance of Sentinel-2 is sensitive to the alternation of all INFORM input parameters, while the simulated canopy reflectance from RapidEye did not show sensitivity to leaf water content variations. In general, there was agreement between the simulated and measured reflectance spectra from RapidEye and Sentinel-2, particularly in the visible and red-edge regions. However, examining the average absolute error from the simulated and measured reflectance revealed a large discrepancy in spectral bands around the near-infrared shoulder. The relationship between retrieved and measured leaf chlorophyll content from the Sentinel-2 data had a higher coefficient of determination with a higher NRMSE (NRMSE = 0.36 mu g/cm(2), R-2 = 0.45) compared to those obtained using the RapidEye data (NRMSE = 0.31 mu g/cm(2) and R-2 = 0.39). Using the mean of the ten best solutions (retrieved chlorophyll) the retrieval error for both Sentinel-2 and RapidEye data decreased (NRMSE = 0.34, NRMSE = 0.26, respectively), as compared to only selecting the single best solution. When the Sentinel-2 red edge bands were used as the spectral subset, the retrieval error of leaf chlorophyll decreased indicating the importance of red edge, as well as properly located spectral bands, for leaf chlorophyll estimation. The chlorophyll maps produced by the inversion of the two LUTs effectively represented the variation of foliar chlorophyll in BFNP and confirmed our earlier findings on the observed stress pattern caused by insect infestation.

Key words

INFORM/RapidEye/Sentinel-2/Red edge/Lookup table/Leaf chlorophyll content/Norway spruce

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出版年

2019
International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

SCI
ISSN:0303-2434
被引量23
参考文献量114
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