4.7 Article

Comparison of Different Multispectral Sensors for Photosynthetic and Non-Photosynthetic Vegetation-Fraction Retrieval

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs12010115

Keywords

Sentinel-2A MSI; GF1 WFV; Landsat-8 OLI; photosynthetic vegetation; non-photosynthetic vegetation; linear and nonlinear spectral-mixture analysis

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program [2016YFC0500806]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31360204, 41571421]
  3. Science and Technology Research Project of Chongqing Education Commission [KJ1600530]
  4. GF6 Project [30-Y20A03-9003-17/18]

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It is very difficult and complex to acquire photosynthetic vegetation (PV) and non-PV (NPV) fractions (f(PV) and f(NPV)) using multispectral satellite sensors because estimations of f(PV) and f(NPV) are influenced by many factors, such as background-noise interference of pixel-, spatial-, and spectral-scale effects. In this study, comparisons between Sentinel-2A Multispectral Instrument (S2 MSI), Landsat-8 Operational Land Imager (L8 OLI), and GF1 Wide Field View (GF1 WFV) sensors for retrieving sparse photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic vegetation coverage are presented. The analysis employed a linear spectral-mixture model (LSMM) and nonlinear spectral-mixture model (NSMM) to unmix pixels with different spectral and spatial resolution images based on field endmembers; the estimated endmember fractions were later validated with reference to fraction measurements. The results demonstrated that: (1) with higher spatial and spectral resolution, the S2 MSI sensor had a clear advantage for retrieving PV and NPV fractions compared to L8 OLI and GF1 WFV sensors; (2) through incorporating more red edge (RE) and near-infrared (NIR) bands, the accuracy of NPV fraction estimation could be greatly improved; (3) nonlinear spectral mixing effects were not obvious on the 10-30 m spatial scale for desert vegetation; (4) in arid regions, a shadow endmember is a significant factor for sparse vegetation coverage estimated with remote-sensing data. The estimated NPV fractions were especially affected by the shadow effects and could increase root mean square by 50%. The utilized approaches in the study could effectively assess the performance of major multispectral sensors to extract f(PV) and f(NPV) through the novel method of spectral-mixture analysis.

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