Spatial Scale and Landscape Heterogeneity Effects on FAPAR in an Open-Canopy Black Spruce Forest in Interior Alaska
Black spruce forests dominate the land cover in interior Alaska. In this region, satellite remote sensing of ecosystem productivity is useful for evaluating black spruce forest status and recovery processes. The fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FAPAR) by green leaves is a pa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE geoscience and remote sensing letters 2014-02, Vol.11 (2), p.564-568 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Black spruce forests dominate the land cover in interior Alaska. In this region, satellite remote sensing of ecosystem productivity is useful for evaluating black spruce forest status and recovery processes. The fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FAPAR) by green leaves is a particularly important input parameter for ecosystem models. FAPAR 1d is computed as the ratio of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (APAR 3d ) to the incident photosynthetically active radiation at the horizontal plane above the canopy (PAR 1d , FAPAR 1d = APAR 3d /PAR 1d ). The parameter FAPAR 1d is scale dependent and can be larger than 1 as a result of laterally incident PAR. We investigated the dependence of FAPAR 1d on spatial scale in an open-canopy black spruce forest in interior Alaska. We compared FAPAR 1d with FAPAR 3d ( = APAR 3d /PAR 3d ), the latter of which considers incident PAR as actinic flux (spheradiance) (PAR 3d ). Our results showed the following: 1) landscape scale FAPAR 3d (30×30 m 2 ) was always larger (0.39-0.43) than FAPAR 1d (0.19-0.27) due to the landscape heterogeneity and incident PAR regime, and 2) at the individual tree scale, FAPAR 1d was highly variable, with 34% (day of year [DOY] 180) to 52% (DOY 258) of , whereas FAPAR 3d varied across a much narrower range (0.2-0.5). The spatial-scale dependence of the ratio of PAR 3d to PAR 1d converged at the pixel size larger than 5 m. Thus, a 5-m or coarser resolution was necessary to ignore the lateral PAR effect in the open-canopy black spruce forest. |
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ISSN: | 1545-598X 1558-0571 |
DOI: | 10.1109/LGRS.2013.2278426 |