4.7 Article

Phenology Effects on Physically Based Estimation of Paddy Rice Canopy Traits from UAV Hyperspectral Imagery

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13091792

Keywords

paddy rice; growth stages; phenology; soil background; radiative transfer models; PROSAIL; lookup tables; hyperspectral

Funding

  1. GDAS' Project of Science and Technology Development [2020GDASYL-20200103011, 2018GDASCX-0403]
  2. Guangdong Province Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation and Promotion Projec [2019KJ102, 2020KJ102]
  3. Guangzhou Basic Research Project [202002020076]

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Radiation transform models like PROSAIL are commonly used for crop canopy reflectance simulation and biophysical parameter inversion. This study focused on extracting paddy rice LAI, LCC, and CCC from UAV-based hyperspectral images using PROSAIL with a LUT strategy, with a specific emphasis on growth stage development and soil background signature selection. Results indicate that incorporating flooded soil reflectance as background can enhance estimation accuracy, especially during tillering growth stages. The estimation accuracy of CCC remains consistent from tillering to heading growth stages.
Radiation transform models such as PROSAIL are widely used for crop canopy reflectance simulation and biophysical parameter inversion. The PROSAIL model basically assumes that the canopy is turbid homogenous media with a bare soil background. However, the canopy structure changes when crop growth stages develop, which is more or less a departure from this assumption. In addition, a paddy rice field is inundated most of the time with flooded soil background. In this study, field-scale paddy rice leaf area index (LAI), leaf cholorphyll content (LCC), and canopy chlorophyll content (CCC) were retrieved from unmanned-aerial-vehicle-based hyperspectral images by the PROSAIL radiation transform model using a lookup table (LUT) strategy, with a special focus on the effects of growth-stage development and soil-background signature selection. Results show that involving flooded soil reflectance as background reflectance for PROSAIL could improve estimation accuracy. When using a LUT with the flooded soil reflectance signature (LUTflooded) the coefficients of determination (R-2) between observed and estimation variables are 0.70, 0.11, and 0.79 for LAI, LCC, and CCC, respectively, for the entire growing season (from tillering to heading growth stages), and the corresponding mean absolute errors (MAEs) are 21.87%, 16.27%, and 12.52%. For LAI and LCC, high model bias mainly occurred in tillering growth stages. There is an obvious overestimation of LAI and underestimation of LCC for in the tillering growth stage. The estimation accuracy of CCC is relatively consistent from tillering to heading growth stages.

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