4.7 Article

Application of Crop Model Data Assimilation With a Particle Filter for Estimating Regional Winter Wheat Yields

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSTARS.2014.2316012

Keywords

Crop model; data assimilation; leaf area index; particle filter (PF); remote sensing; yield estimation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41371396, 41301457]
  2. Agricultural Scientific Research Fund of Outstanding Talents
  3. Open Fund for the Key Laboratory of Agri-Informatics, Ministry of Apiculture, China [2013009]
  4. Introduction of International Advanced Agricultural Science and Technology, Ministry of Agriculture, China (948 Program) [2011-G6]
  5. National High Technology Research and Development Program of China (863 Program) [2012AA12A307]
  6. National Nonprofit Institute Research Grant of CAAS [LARRP-2014-14]

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To improve the performance of cropmodels for regional crop yield estimates, a particle filter (PF) was introduced to develop a data assimilation strategy using the Crop Environment Resource Synthesis (CERES)-Wheatmodel. Two experiments involving winter wheat yield estimations were conducted at a field plot and on a regional scale to test the feasibility of the PF-based data assimilation strategy and to analyze the effects of the PF parameters and spatiotemporal scales of assimilating observations on the performance of the crop model data assimilation. The significant improvements in the yield estimation suggest that PF-based crop model data assimilation is feasible. Winter wheat yields from the field plots were forecasted with a determination coefficient (R-2) of 0.87, a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 251 kg/ha, and a relative error (RE) of 2.95%. An acceptable yield at the county scale was estimated with a R-2 of 0.998, a RMSE of 9734 t, and a RE of 4.29%. The optimal yield estimates may be highly dependent on the reasonable spatiotemporal resolution of assimilating observations. A configuration using a particle size of 50, LAI maps with a moderate spatial resolution (e.g., 1 km), and an assimilation interval of 20 d results in a reasonable tradeoff between accuracy and effectiveness in regional applications.

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