• DocumentCode
    29116
  • Title

    Impact of Diurnal Variation in Vegetation Water Content on Radar Backscatter From Maize During Water Stress

  • Author

    van Emmerik, Tim ; Steele-Dunne, Susan C. ; Judge, Jasmeet ; van de Giesen, Nick

  • Author_Institution
    Fac. of Civil Eng. & Geosci., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
  • Volume
    53
  • Issue
    7
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Jul-15
  • Firstpage
    3855
  • Lastpage
    3869
  • Abstract
    Microwave backscatter from vegetated surfaces is influenced by vegetation structure and vegetation water content (VWC), which varies with meteorological conditions and moisture in the root zone. Radar backscatter observations are used for many vegetation and soil moisture monitoring applications under the assumption that VWC is constant on short timescales. This research aims to understand how backscatter over agricultural canopies changes in response to diurnal differences in VWC due to water stress. A standard water-cloud model and a two-layer water-cloud model for maize were used to simulate the influence of the observed variations in bulk/leaf/stalk VWC and soil moisture on the various contributions to total backscatter at a range of frequencies, polarizations, and incidence angles. The bulk VWC and leaf VWC were found to change up to 30% and 40%, respectively, on a diurnal basis during water stress and may have a significant effect on radar backscatter. Total backscatter time series are presented to illustrate the simulated diurnal difference in backscatter for different radar frequencies, polarizations, and incidence angles. Results show that backscatter is very sensitive to variations in VWC during water stress, particularly at large incidence angles and higher frequencies. The diurnal variation in total backscatter was dominated by variations in leaf water content, with simulated diurnal differences of up to 4 dB in X- through Ku-bands (8.6-35 GHz) . This study highlights a potential source of error in current vegetation and soil monitoring applications and provides insights into the potential use for radar to detect variations in VWC due to water stress.
  • Keywords
    atmospheric humidity; backscatter; clouds; crops; meteorology; radar; remote sensing; soil; vegetation; water; agricultural canopies; diurnal basis; diurnal differences; diurnal variation impact; incidence angles; leaf vegetation water content; maize; meteorological condition; microwave backscatter; moisture condition; polarizations; radar backscatter observations; radar frequencies; root zone; soil moisture monitoring application; standard water-cloud model; time scales; total backscatter time series; two-layer water-cloud model; vegetated surfaces; vegetation monitoring application; vegetation structure; water stress; Backscatter; Radar; Soil measurements; Soil moisture; Stress; Vegetation mapping; Agriculture; diurnal differences; hydrology; microwaves; radar; vegetation; vegetation water content (VWC); water stress;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0196-2892
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TGRS.2014.2386142
  • Filename
    7015583