Quantifying the Robustness of Vegetation Indices through Global Sensitivity Analysis of Homogeneous and Forest Leaf-Canopy Radiative Transfer Models.

ARTMO INFORM PROSAIL global sensitivity analysis vegetation indices

Journal

Remote sensing
ISSN: 2072-4292
Titre abrégé: Remote Sens (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101624426

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
18 Oct 2019
Historique:
entrez: 9 9 2022
pubmed: 18 10 2019
medline: 18 10 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Vegetation indices (VIs) are widely used in optical remote sensing to estimate biophysical variables of vegetated surfaces. With the advent of spectroscopy technology, spectral bands can be combined in numerous ways to extract the desired information. This resulted in a plethora of proposed indices, designed for a diversity of applications and research purposes. However, it is not always clear whether they are sensitive to the variable of interest while at the same time, responding insensitive to confounding factors. Hence, to be able to quantify the robustness of VIs, a systematic evaluation is needed, thereby introducing a widest possible variety of biochemical and structural heterogeneity. Such exercise can be achieved with coupled leaf and canopy radiative transfer models (RTMs), whereby input variables can virtually simulate any vegetation scenario. With the intention of evaluating multiple VIs in an efficient way, this led us to the development of a global sensitivity analysis (GSA) toolbox dedicated to the analysis of VIs on their sensitivity towards RTM input variables. We identified VIs that are designed to be sensitive towards leaf chlorophyll content (LCC), leaf water content (LWC) and leaf area index (LAI) for common sensors of terrestrial Earth observation satellites: Landsat 8, MODIS, Sentinel-2, Sentinel-3 and the upcoming imaging spectrometer mission EnMAP. The coupled RTMs PROSAIL and PROINFORM were used for simulations of homogeneous and forest canopies respectively. GSA total sensitivity results suggest that LCC-sensitive indices respond most robust: for the great majority of scenarios, chlorophyll a + b content (Cab) drives between 75% and 82% of the indices' variability. LWC-sensitive indices were most affected by confounding variables such as Cab and LAI, although the equivalent water thickness (Cw) can drive between 25% and 50% of the indices' variability. Conversely, the majority of LAI-sensitive indices are not only sensitive to LAI but rather to a mixture of structural and biochemical variables.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36081655
doi: 10.3390/rs11202418
pmc: PMC7613359
mid: EMS152649
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

2418

Subventions

Organisme : European Research Council
ID : 755617
Pays : International

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Références

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Auteurs

Pablo Morcillo-Pallarés (P)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Juan Pablo Rivera-Caicedo (JP)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.
CONACyT-UAN, Secretaría de Investigación y Posgrado, Universidad Autónoma de Nayarit, Ciudad de la Cultura Amado Nervo, Tepic 63155, Nayarit, Mexico.

Santiago Belda (S)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Charlotte De Grave (C)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Helena Burriel (H)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Jose Moreno (J)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Jochem Verrelst (J)

Image Processing Laboratory (IPL), Parc Científic, Universitat de València, 46980 Paterna, València, Spain.

Classifications MeSH