4.6 Article

Monitoring northern mixed prairie health using broadband satellite imagery

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING
Volume 29, Issue 8, Pages 2257-2271

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01431160701408378

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The mixed prairie in Canada is characterized by its low to medium green vegetation cover, high amount of non-photosynthetic materials, and ground level biological crust. It has proven to be a challenge for the application of remotely sensed data in extracting biophysical variables for the purpose of monitoring grassland health. Therefore, this study was conducted to evaluate the efficiency of broadband-based reflectance and vegetation indices in extracting ground canopy information. The study area was Grasslands National Park (GNP) Canada and the surrounding pastures, which represent the northern mixed prairie. Fieldwork was conducted from late June to early July 2005. Biophysical variables - canopy height, cover, biomass, and species composition - were collected for 31 sites. Two satellite images, one SPOT 4 image on 22 June 2005, and one Landsat 5TM image on 14 July 2005, were collected for the corresponding time period. Results show that the spectral curve of the grass canopy was similar to that of the bare soil with lower reflectance at each band. Consequently, commonly used vegetation indices were not necessarily better than reflectance when it comes to single wavelength regions at extracting biophysical information. Reflectance, NDVI, ATSAVI, and two new coined cover indices were good at extracting biophysical information.

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