Title :
Monitoring of freeze/thaw transitions in taiga forests using ERS-1 SAR
Author :
Rignot, E. ; Williams, C. ; Donald, Mc K. ; Way, J.B. ; Zimmermann, R. ; Viereck, L.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
Automated recording stations have been installed at the Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest, a Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) site located near Fairbanks, Alaska, in a forest stand of the Tanana River floodplain underlain by discontinous permafrost. These stations provide a continuous record of dielectric constant and temperature of the tree trunks, and soil moisture and temperature profiles down to the root zone. Along with the weather stations deployed at the same location, these measurements provide a continuous record of the environmental and phenologic conditions of the forest during a complete seasonal cycle. At the same time, ERS-1 SAR imaged the study site repeatedly from space to provide radar backscatter measurements of the forest approximately three limes a month. The authors examine the temporal dynamic of ERS-1 SAR measurements in relation with the changing environmental and phenologic state of the forest canopy and of the forest ground layers during the winter/spring and fall/winter transitions of 1992 and 1993. During these transitions, the authors examine whether changes in radar backscatter observed by ERS-1 may be related to freezing or thawing of the soil and vegetation in order to determine the start and end of the growing season for the forest. The results of this analysis are used in turn to determine whether similar changes are observed over larger regions. Mosaics of SAR data generated along three different North-South Alaskan ERS-1 transects that intercept with the authors´ study site are used in combination with hourly air-temperature and daily precipitation rates gathered at airport weather stations by the National Weather Service. Results obtained using ERS-1 data collected from January 1992 to mid-1993 are discussed
Keywords :
atmospheric temperature; backscatter; forestry; geophysical techniques; hydrological techniques; ice; radar applications; radar cross-sections; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; Arctic region polar; Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest; ERS-1 SAR synthetic aperture radar; Fairbanks Alaska; Tanana River floodplain; United States USA; atmosphere; dielectric constant; discontinous permafrost; freeze thaw transition meteorlogy; geophysical remote sensing; hydrology; land surface; measurement technique; radar scattering backscatter; season; soil moisture ice; taiga forest; temperature; terrestrial heat geothermal; tree trunk; vegetation; Backscatter; Dielectric constant; Dielectric measurements; Disk recording; Monitoring; Rivers; Soil measurements; Soil moisture; Spaceborne radar; Temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 1994. IGARSS '94. Surface and Atmospheric Remote Sensing: Technologies, Data Analysis and Interpretation., International
Conference_Location :
Pasadena, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1497-2
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.1994.399086