Titre | Artificial neural network modeling of high arctic phytomass using synthetic aperture radar and multispectral data |
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Auteur | Collingwood, A; Treitz, P; Charbonneau, F; Atkinson, D M |
Source | Remote Sensing vol. 6, no. 3, 2014 p. 2134-2153, https://doi.org/10.3390/rs6032134 Accès ouvert |
Année | 2014 |
Séries alt. | Ressources naturelles Canada, Contribution externe 20181375 |
Éditeur | MDPI AG |
Document | publication en série |
Lang. | anglais |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.3390/rs6032134 |
Media | papier; en ligne; numérique |
Formats | pdf |
Sujets | télédétection; géophysique |
Programme | Géoscience pour la sécurité publique |
Diffusé | 2014 03 07 |
Résumé | (disponible en anglais seulement) Vegetation in the Arctic is often sparse, spatially heterogeneous, and difficult to model. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) has shown some promise in above-ground
phytomass estimation at sub-arctic latitudes, but the utility of this type of data is not known in the context of the unique environments of the Canadian High Arctic. In this paper, Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) were created to model the
relationship between variables derived from high resolution multi-incidence angle RADARSAT-2 SAR data and optically-derived (GeoEye-1) Soil Adjusted Vegetation Index (SAVI) values. The modeled SAVI values (i.e., from SAR variables) were then used to
create maps of above-ground phytomass across the study area. SAVI model results for individual ecological classes of polar semi-desert, mesic heath, wet sedge, and felsenmeer were reasonable, with r2 values of 0.43, 0.43, 0.30, and 0.59,
respectively. When the outputs of these models were combined to analyze the relationship between the model output and SAVI as a group, the r2 value was 0.60, with an 8% normalized root mean square error (% of the total range of phytomass values), a
positive indicator of a relationship. The above-ground phytomass model also resulted in a very strong relationship (r2 = 0.87) between SAR-modeled and field-measured phytomass. A positive relationship was also found between optically derived SAVI
values and field measured phytomass (r2 = 0.79). These relationships demonstrate the utility of SAR data, compared to using optical data alone, for modeling above-ground phytomass in a high arctic environment possessing relatively low levels of
vegetation. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. |
GEOSCAN ID | 311729 |
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