4.7 Article

Evaluation of polarimetric Radarsat-2 SAR data for development of soil moisture retrieval algorithms over a chronosequence of black spruce boreal forests

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 132, Issue -, Pages 71-85

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2013.01.006

Keywords

Polarimetric radar; SAR; Polarimetric decomposition; Polarimetric discriminators; Soil moisture; Boreal; Fuel moisture; Black spruce; Picea mariana

Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. NASA [NNX09AM15G, NNG04GR24G]
  3. Canadian Space Agency SOAR [445]
  4. NASA [NNX09AM15G, 112899] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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C-band Radarsat-2 data were used to develop Multi-parameter algorithms to retrieve soil moisture across a chronosequence (recently burned, shrubby regrowth and mature forest) of fire-disturbed Alaskan boreal black spruce forests using polarized backscatter intensity, polarimetric decomposition and discriminator parameters as independent variables. To account for complex interactions of surface roughness, biomass and soil moisture, multiple polarimetric variables were evaluated empirically in algorithm development using a time series dataset that included the wet and dry extreme conditions. Results indicate that polarimetric discriminators, such as maximum degree of polarization, fractional polarization or coefficient of variation, may be instrumental in accounting for the type of scattering occurring or the complexity or heterogeneity of the distributed target. Using the maximum degree of polarization combined with one or more variables on scattered intensity (e.g. C-HV, C-HH, or maximum scattering intensity) improved multi-linear moisture retrieval algorithms by 27-33% over the single, dual and quad polarized backscatter intensity algorithms. For all sites combined, algorithms were developed with low SE (7.0% volumetric soil moisture), moderately high R-2 (0.77) and low RMSE (6.7% volumetric soil moisture). However, the best models were produced by separating the recently burned forests (strongest algorithm: R-2 0.94, SE 5.9, RMSE 7.4) from the shrubby and mature forests (best algorithm: R-2 0.85, SE 4.7, RMSE 73). Results are limited to sites with biomass below 3 kg/m(2). (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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