4.7 Article

Sentinel-1 to NDVI for Agricultural Fields Using Hyperlocal Dynamic Machine Learning Approach

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14112600

Keywords

NDVI; SAR; machine learning; random forest; time series

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The normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is an important parameter in precision agriculture. However, existing methods for estimating NDVI using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) have limitations. This study proposes a new method, called Sentinel-1 to NDVIs for Agricultural Fields (SNAF), which utilizes a hyperlocal machine learning approach to convert Sentinel-1 data to NDVI values for agricultural fields. The method aims to overcome the limitations of existing methods and provide a continuous stream of NDVI values for agricultural decision making.
The normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is a key parameter in precision agriculture. It has been used globally since the 1970s as a proxy to monitor crop growth and correlates to the crop coefficient (Kc), leaf area index (LAI), crop cover, and more. Yet, it is susceptible to clouds and other atmospheric conditions that might alter the crop's real NDVI value. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), on the other hand, can penetrate clouds and is hardly affected by atmospheric conditions, but it is sensitive to the physical structure of the crop and therefore does not give a direct indication of the NDVI. Several SAR indices and methods have been suggested to estimate NDVIs via SAR; however, they tend to work for local spatial and temporal conditions and do not work well globally. This is because they are not flexible enough to capture the changing NDVI-SAR relationship throughout the crop-growing season. This study suggests a new method for converting Sentinel-1 to NDVIs for Agricultural Fields (SNAF) by utilizing a hyperlocal machine learning approach. This method generates multiple on-the-fly disposal field- and time-specific models for every available Sentinel-1 image across 2021. Each model learns the field-specific NDVI (from Sentinel-2 and Landsat-8) -SAR (Sentinel-1) relationship based on recent NDVI and SAR time series and consequently estimates the optimal NDVI value from the current SAR image. The SNAF was tested on 548 commercial fields from 18 countries with 28 crop types and, based on 6880 paired NDVI-SAR images, achieved an RMSE, bias, and R-2 of 0.06, 0.00, and 0.92, respectively. The outcome of this study aspires to a persistent seamless stream of NDVI values, regardless of the atmospheric conditions, illumination, or local conditions, which can assist in agricultural decision making.

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