Title :
Temporal stability of northern forest biophysical retrievals using SIR-C/X-SAR
Author :
Dobson, M. Craig ; Pierce, Leland E. ; Bergen, Kathleen M. ; Ulaby, Fawwaz T.
Author_Institution :
Radiat. Lab., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
Abstract :
Smmary form only given, as follows. A semi-empirical approach for retrieval of forest biophysical properties (basal area, height, woody stem biomass and crown biomass) has been previously demonstrated for forests in Northern Michigan using SIR-C/X-SAR data. This technique uses a multi-step process that incorporates (1) a land-cover classification to specify forest structural type, (2) estimates of SAR-derived basal area, height and canopy biomass from class-specific empirical algorithms using multifrequency and polarimetric SIR-C/XSBR data (3) in conjunction with readily available ancillary information to convert volume to dry mass in the analysis of SIR-C/X-SAR data. This paper examines the temporal stability of the retrieval process. At issue is the sensitivity of the algorithms to scene dynamics such as ground-cover conditions (i.e., snow-cover and soil moisture) and phenological control of plant water status. The authors examine four SIR-C/XSAR scenes all acquired at approximately 30° angle of incidence over the Raco Supersite in Northern Michigan. These SAR scenes represent four distinct conditions with respect to dielectric attributes at the test site. Two scenes from SRL-1 in April 1994, represent early spring tree physiology with thawed tree stems and sap movement in some species and without deciduous leaf-cover; the scenes are differentiated by the thickness and wetness conditions of the snowpack (dry and wet). Two additional scenes, from SRL-2 in October 1994, represent early senescence of deciduous species, and are differentiated by near-surface soil moisture conditions (i.e., before and after heavy precipitation). The vegetation is not frozen during any of the SAR observations. The results show that the date-to-date differences in the algorithm coefficients are related to dielectric effects of the surface (soil and snow-cover). The net effects are shown to be strongest for areas of low biomass conditions, wherein SAR sensitivity of surface properties is strongest due to limited extinction by the overlying vegetation
Keywords :
forestry; geophysical techniques; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; Michigan; SAR; SHF; SIR; SIR-C; USA; United States; X-SAR; X-band; basal area; canopy biomass; forest; forest structural type; forestry; geophysical measurement technique; land-cover classification; microwave radar; northern forest biophysical retrieval; radar remote sensing; semi-empirical approach; spaceborne radar; temporal stability; vegetation mapping; Algorithm design and analysis; Biomass; Dielectrics; Heuristic algorithms; Information analysis; Information retrieval; Layout; Soil moisture; Stability; Vegetation;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 1996. IGARSS '96. 'Remote Sensing for a Sustainable Future.', International
Conference_Location :
Lincoln, NE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3068-4
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.1996.516577