Title of article :
Relationship of a Landsat cumulative disturbance index to canopy nitrogen and forest structure
Author/Authors :
Deel، نويسنده , , Lindsay N. and McNeil، نويسنده , , Brenden E. and Curtis، نويسنده , , Philip G. and Serbin، نويسنده , , Shawn P. and Singh، نويسنده , , Aditya and Eshleman، نويسنده , , Keith N. and Townsend، نويسنده , , Philip A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
10
From page :
40
To page :
49
Abstract :
Spatially-explicit knowledge of the timing, frequency, and intensity of forest disturbances is essential for forest management, yet little is known about how disturbances such as forest harvests and insect outbreaks might accumulate in their effects over time. Capturing the many forest harvest and insect defoliation events occurring over twenty-five years, we transformed a series of Landsat images into cumulative disturbance maps covering Green Ridge State Forest (GRSF) and Savage River State Forest (SRSF) in western Maryland. These maps summed yearly ΔDI images, which were defined as the change in a yearly tasseled cap disturbance index (DI), relative to a synthetic reference condition map created by finding the minimum DI value for all years. Intensive field-plot surveys and AVIRIS imagery collected during the summer of 2009 provided measurements of forest structure and canopy nitrogen. With these data, we found that while the most recent yearʹs ΔDI had little relation, increases in the cumulative DI were related to decreased field-measured current canopy cover (R2 = 0.66 at GRSF, 0.67 at SRSF and 0.34 combined) and watershed-averaged AVIRIS canopy N (R2 = 0.40 at GRSF, 0.57 at SRSF and 0.54 combined). The latter relationship was obscured at the field-plot level of analysis, suggesting that fine scale studies will also need to account for other drivers (e.g. species composition) of variability in canopy N. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that Landsat time series data can be synthesized into cumulative metrics incorporating multiple disturbance types, which help explain important cumulative disturbance-mediated changes in ecosystem functioning.
Keywords :
Landsat , Disturbance index , disturbance , Eastern forests , Ecosystem ecology , forest ecology
Journal title :
Remote Sensing of Environment
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Remote Sensing of Environment
Record number :
1631592
Link To Document :
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