DocumentCode
1237921
Title
Observations and Modeling of a Pine Forest Floor at L-Band
Author
Grant, Jennifer P. ; Van De Griend, Adriaan A. ; Schwank, Mike ; Wigneron, Jean-Pierre
Author_Institution
Dept. of Hydrol. & Geo-Environ. Sci., Vrije Univ. Amsterdam, Amsterdam
Volume
47
Issue
7
fYear
2009
fDate
7/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2024
Lastpage
2034
Abstract
Recent studies of passive L-band observations over forests have shown that the average canopy transmissivity in temperate coniferous and deciduous forests is on the order of 0.4-0.5. Although the canopy would therefore be expected to transmit a reasonable amount of ground emission, the total emission observed above the canopy shows very little variation with varying soil moisture content. Moist litter present on the forest floor is known to obscure the soil emission. Therefore, more knowledge on the L-band radiative properties of litter and understory layers is needed to better understand the emission of the whole forest system. In order to contribute toward this issue, a field experiment was conducted in a pine forest in southwest France. Radiometric observations were done on the canopy and on different configurations of the forest floor, following sequential stripping of each forest floor layer. In combination with a long-term data set of above-canopy observations, this resulted in emissivity values of bare soil, soil-litter, soil-litter-grass, and soil-litter-grass-canopy configurations for a range of soil and litter moisture values. Calculations involved the use of the Wilheit and L-MEB models. The sensitivity to soil moisture was found to be substantially suppressed by the presence of a grass understory and litter. This corroborates the low correlation between soil moisture and L-band brightness temperature measured above the canopy. Several results of recent modeling and laboratory studies are also confirmed by this paper, which is, to our knowledge, the first to use in situ experimental data in this context.
Keywords
forestry; radiometry; soil; L-MEB models; L-band brightness temperature; L-band radiative properties; Wilheit models; canopy transmissivity; coniferous forests; deciduous forests; grass understory; litter moisture; pine forest floor; radiometry; sequential stripping; soil moisture content; soil-litter-grass-canopy configurations; Forest; L-band; litter; microwave radiometry; understory;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2008.2010252
Filename
4814566
Link To Document