Title of article
Remote sensing of evapotranspiration and carbon uptake at Harvard Forest
Author/Authors
Min، نويسنده , , Qilong and Lin، نويسنده , , Bing، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
9
From page
379
To page
387
Abstract
A land surface vegetation index, defined as the difference of microwave land surface emissivity at 19 and 37 GHz, was calculated for a heavily forested area in north central Massachusetts. The microwave emissivity difference vegetation index (EDVI) was estimated from satellite SSM/I measurements at the defined wavelengths and used to estimate land surface turbulent fluxes. Narrowband visible and infrared measurements and broadband solar radiation observations were used in the EDVI retrievals and turbulent flux estimations. The EDVI values represent physical properties of crown vegetation such as vegetation water content of crown canopies. The collocated land surface turbulent and radiative fluxes were empirically linked together by the EDVI values. The EDVI values are statistically sensitive to evapotranspiration fractions (EF) with a correlation coefficient (R) greater than 0.79 under all-sky conditions. For clear skies, EDVI estimates exhibit a stronger relationship with EF than normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI). Furthermore, the products of EDVI and input energy (solar and photosynthetically active radiation) are statistically significantly correlated to evapotranspiration (R = 0.95) and CO2 uptake flux (R = 0.74), respectively.
Keywords
Evapotranspiration , carbon uptake , Microwave emissivity , Vegetation water content
Journal title
Remote Sensing of Environment
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Remote Sensing of Environment
Record number
1574811
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