4.5 Article

Using hyper-spectral indices to detect soil phosphorus concentration for various land use patterns

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 187, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-014-4130-x

Keywords

Hyper-spectral; Vegetation indices; Land use; Soil phosphorus

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41301227]
  2. Key Laboratory of Coastal Zone Exploitation and Protection, Ministry of Land and Resource [2013CZEPK06]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Nanjing Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Science [Y412201427]

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The management of nonpoint source pollution requires accurate information regarding soil phosphorus concentrations for different land use patterns. The use of remotely sensed information provides an important opportunity for such studies, and the previous studies showed that soil phosphorus shows no clear spectral response feature, while the phosphorus concentrations can be indirectly detected from the normalised difference vegetation indices (NDVI). Therefore, this study uses an optimised index in the RED and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths to estimate total phosphorus and Olsen-P concentrations. The prediction accuracy is not entirely satisfactory with respect to a mixed land use dataset in which the determination coefficient was maintained at approximately 0.6, with particularly poor performance obtained for forest land group. However, the prediction accuracy increases markedly with the separation of samples into broad land use categories, even the R-2 was exceeded 0.8 for tea plantation group. The soil phosphorus prediction effect showed obvious variance for different land use patterns, which was related to vegetation growth conditions and critical soil properties including soil organic matter and mechanical composition.

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