Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Oliveira, Julianne de Castro
Data de Publicação: 2016
Tipo de documento: Tese
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USP
Texto Completo: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/11/11150/tde-28092016-130547/
Resumo: Radiative transfer models (RTM) have been successfully used to simulate the effect of forest structural and biochemical characteristics, such as tree sizes and shapes, leaf area index (LAI), leaf angle distribution (LAD), on the canopy radiative budget. One particular use of RTM is the analysis of the reflected light by the canopy, which can be measured by remote sensing techniques. RTM allows a physically based interpretation of the reflectance quantity measured by satellite and can help disentangling the multiple source of variation of the reflectance signal. The DART model - Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer - is one of the most complex three-dimensional RTM, since it uses an accurate mathematical approach of physical processes and a great realism of the landscapes under simulation. Its main simulation outputs are the reflectance of the scene (e.g. a forest stand) at particular spectral wavelength from bottom and top of the atmosphere, the simulation of satellite images, and the simulation of localized radiative budget. Despite the DART potential in analyzing biophysical parameters from remote sensing data, few studies report its application in forest plantations in Brazil, which can have a large number of important field measurements to parameterize the model. The main objective of this project is to evaluate if the DART RTM can help understand the satellite-measured canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus plantations and in particular if DART RTM can improve LAI estimation rather than use only empirical models, as spectral vegetation indices. DART model was parameterized using extensive in situ data obtained from a clonal test, part of the EucFlux project. The specific objectives were: i) parameterize the DART model at different growth stages and for different clonal materials of Eucalyptus plantations and compare simulated reflectance with high resolution satellite images acquired on the same site; ii) analyze the relationship between the Leaf Area Index (LAI) and Spectral Vegetation Indices (SVI) based on empirical relationships, and then use the DART model; iii) analyze the advantage and drawbacks of using a generic relationship or a clone-specific relationship between LAI and SVI, and find other criteria for grouping the genotypes in the same. In Chapter 2, we demonstrated the good performance of DART to simulate canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus forest plantations. The simulated reflectance was similar to those measured by very high resolution images from satellite, despite some discrepancies found in the near infrared region. Then, in Chapter 3, we showed that empirical relationships between LAI and SVI were able to give a reasonable precision for generic relationships; however, genotype-scale relationships gave even better results. The same methodology applied on a DART simulated dataset lead to the same conclusions. An intermediate possibility of grouping the genotypes regarding their litter or leaf optical properties gave intermediate performance. We finally concluded about the superiority of NDVI to estimate LAI using a genotype-specific calibration. Overall, DART simulated datasets created in this work enable to calibrate different LAI -SVI relationships in terms of genotypes, sensors and acquisition characteristics.
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spelling Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus standsModelagem tridimensional da transferência de radiação e reflectância de dosséis de povoamentos de EucaliptoDARTDART modelForest plantationsImagem de satélitePlantações florestaisReflectanceReflectânciaSatellite imageRadiative transfer models (RTM) have been successfully used to simulate the effect of forest structural and biochemical characteristics, such as tree sizes and shapes, leaf area index (LAI), leaf angle distribution (LAD), on the canopy radiative budget. One particular use of RTM is the analysis of the reflected light by the canopy, which can be measured by remote sensing techniques. RTM allows a physically based interpretation of the reflectance quantity measured by satellite and can help disentangling the multiple source of variation of the reflectance signal. The DART model - Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer - is one of the most complex three-dimensional RTM, since it uses an accurate mathematical approach of physical processes and a great realism of the landscapes under simulation. Its main simulation outputs are the reflectance of the scene (e.g. a forest stand) at particular spectral wavelength from bottom and top of the atmosphere, the simulation of satellite images, and the simulation of localized radiative budget. Despite the DART potential in analyzing biophysical parameters from remote sensing data, few studies report its application in forest plantations in Brazil, which can have a large number of important field measurements to parameterize the model. The main objective of this project is to evaluate if the DART RTM can help understand the satellite-measured canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus plantations and in particular if DART RTM can improve LAI estimation rather than use only empirical models, as spectral vegetation indices. DART model was parameterized using extensive in situ data obtained from a clonal test, part of the EucFlux project. The specific objectives were: i) parameterize the DART model at different growth stages and for different clonal materials of Eucalyptus plantations and compare simulated reflectance with high resolution satellite images acquired on the same site; ii) analyze the relationship between the Leaf Area Index (LAI) and Spectral Vegetation Indices (SVI) based on empirical relationships, and then use the DART model; iii) analyze the advantage and drawbacks of using a generic relationship or a clone-specific relationship between LAI and SVI, and find other criteria for grouping the genotypes in the same. In Chapter 2, we demonstrated the good performance of DART to simulate canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus forest plantations. The simulated reflectance was similar to those measured by very high resolution images from satellite, despite some discrepancies found in the near infrared region. Then, in Chapter 3, we showed that empirical relationships between LAI and SVI were able to give a reasonable precision for generic relationships; however, genotype-scale relationships gave even better results. The same methodology applied on a DART simulated dataset lead to the same conclusions. An intermediate possibility of grouping the genotypes regarding their litter or leaf optical properties gave intermediate performance. We finally concluded about the superiority of NDVI to estimate LAI using a genotype-specific calibration. Overall, DART simulated datasets created in this work enable to calibrate different LAI -SVI relationships in terms of genotypes, sensors and acquisition characteristics.Modelos de transferência de radiação (MTR) têm sido utilizados com sucesso para simular o efeito das características estruturais e bioquímicas florestais, como tamanhos de árvores e formas, índice de área foliar (IAF), distribuição angular das folhas (DAF) e sobre o balanço de radiação. Um uso particular do MTR é a análise da radiação refletida pela copa, o que pode ser medido através de técnicas de sensoriamento remoto. O MTR pode permitir a interpretação física da quantidade de reflectância medido por satélite, e pode ajudar a diferenciar as múltiplas fontes de variação do sinal de reflectância. O modelo DART - Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer - é um dos modelos tridimensionais de transferência de radiação mais complexos, uma vez que utiliza uma abordagem matemática precisa e um grande realismo na simulação das paisagens. Seus principais resultados de simulação são a reflectância da cena (por exemplo, um povoamento florestal) em determinado comprimento de onda espectral em relação ao topo e à base da atmosfera, a simulação de imagens de satélite e a simulação do balanço de radiação. Apesar do potencial do DART na análise de parâmetros biofísicos de paisagens florestais a partir de dados de sensoriamento remoto, existem poucos estudos sobre sua aplicação em povoamentos florestais no Brasil; que podem dispor de um elevado número de medições de campo importantes para a parametrização do modelo. O principal objetivo deste estudo foi avaliar se o DART pode ajudar a compreender o comportamento da reflectância do dossel das plantações de eucalipto oriunda de dados de imagens de satélite e, em particular, se DART pode melhorar a estimativa do IAF ao invés do uso somente de modelos empíricos como índices espectrais da vegetação. O DART foi parametrizado com extensos dados de campo adquiridos em um experimento com testes clonais do Projeto Eucflux. Os objetivos específicos foram: i) parametrizar o modelo DART em diferentes idades e com diferentes materiais genéticos de plantações de eucalipto e comparar a refletância simulada com imagens de satélite de alta resolução adquiridas no mesmo local; ii) analisar a relação entre o Índice de Área Foliar (IAF) e Índices Espectrais de Vegetação (IEV\'s) com base em relações empíricas, e, em seguida, usando o modelo DART; iii) analisar as vantagens e as limitações do uso de uma relação genérica ou uma relação específica do genótipo entre IAF e IV e encontrar outros critérios para agrupar os genótipos. No Capítulo 2 foi demonstrado bom desempenho do DART para simular a reflectância do dossel das florestas plantadas de eucalipto. As refletâncias simuladas foram semelhantes com as obtidas pelas imagens de satélite de alta resolução, apesar de algumas discrepâncias encontradas na região do infravermelho próximo. No Capítulo 3, foi mostrado que as relações empíricas entre os IEV\'s e os IAF\'s foram capazes de estimar com razoável precisão para as relações genéricas dos plantios. Contudo, as estimativas por genótipo deram resultados superiores. A mesma metodologia foi aplicada em um conjunto de dados simulados pelo DART com as mesmas conclusões. Uma possibilidade intermediária de agrupar os genótipos foi em função das propriedades ópticas da serapilheira ou das folhas, com desempenhos intermediários. Nós concluímos sobre a superioridade do NDVI para estimar o LAI usando uma calibração específica para cada genótipo. Em termos mais gerais, os dados simulados com o modelo DART utilizados neste trabalho permitiram calibrar diferentes relações IAF-IEV em função dos genótipos, sensores e características de aquisição.Biblioteca Digitais de Teses e Dissertações da USPRodriguez, Luiz Carlos EstravizOliveira, Julianne de Castro2016-06-17info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisapplication/pdfhttp://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/11/11150/tde-28092016-130547/reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USPinstname:Universidade de São Paulo (USP)instacron:USPLiberar o conteúdo para acesso público.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesseng2017-09-04T21:03:48Zoai:teses.usp.br:tde-28092016-130547Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttp://www.teses.usp.br/PUBhttp://www.teses.usp.br/cgi-bin/mtd2br.plvirginia@if.usp.br|| atendimento@aguia.usp.br||virginia@if.usp.bropendoar:27212017-09-04T21:03:48Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da USP - Universidade de São Paulo (USP)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
Modelagem tridimensional da transferência de radiação e reflectância de dosséis de povoamentos de Eucalipto
title Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
spellingShingle Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
Oliveira, Julianne de Castro
DART
DART model
Forest plantations
Imagem de satélite
Plantações florestais
Reflectance
Reflectância
Satellite image
title_short Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
title_full Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
title_fullStr Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
title_full_unstemmed Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
title_sort Three-dimensional modeling of radiative transfer and canopy reflectance in Eucalyptus stands
author Oliveira, Julianne de Castro
author_facet Oliveira, Julianne de Castro
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Rodriguez, Luiz Carlos Estraviz
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Oliveira, Julianne de Castro
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv DART
DART model
Forest plantations
Imagem de satélite
Plantações florestais
Reflectance
Reflectância
Satellite image
topic DART
DART model
Forest plantations
Imagem de satélite
Plantações florestais
Reflectance
Reflectância
Satellite image
description Radiative transfer models (RTM) have been successfully used to simulate the effect of forest structural and biochemical characteristics, such as tree sizes and shapes, leaf area index (LAI), leaf angle distribution (LAD), on the canopy radiative budget. One particular use of RTM is the analysis of the reflected light by the canopy, which can be measured by remote sensing techniques. RTM allows a physically based interpretation of the reflectance quantity measured by satellite and can help disentangling the multiple source of variation of the reflectance signal. The DART model - Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer - is one of the most complex three-dimensional RTM, since it uses an accurate mathematical approach of physical processes and a great realism of the landscapes under simulation. Its main simulation outputs are the reflectance of the scene (e.g. a forest stand) at particular spectral wavelength from bottom and top of the atmosphere, the simulation of satellite images, and the simulation of localized radiative budget. Despite the DART potential in analyzing biophysical parameters from remote sensing data, few studies report its application in forest plantations in Brazil, which can have a large number of important field measurements to parameterize the model. The main objective of this project is to evaluate if the DART RTM can help understand the satellite-measured canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus plantations and in particular if DART RTM can improve LAI estimation rather than use only empirical models, as spectral vegetation indices. DART model was parameterized using extensive in situ data obtained from a clonal test, part of the EucFlux project. The specific objectives were: i) parameterize the DART model at different growth stages and for different clonal materials of Eucalyptus plantations and compare simulated reflectance with high resolution satellite images acquired on the same site; ii) analyze the relationship between the Leaf Area Index (LAI) and Spectral Vegetation Indices (SVI) based on empirical relationships, and then use the DART model; iii) analyze the advantage and drawbacks of using a generic relationship or a clone-specific relationship between LAI and SVI, and find other criteria for grouping the genotypes in the same. In Chapter 2, we demonstrated the good performance of DART to simulate canopy reflectance of Eucalyptus forest plantations. The simulated reflectance was similar to those measured by very high resolution images from satellite, despite some discrepancies found in the near infrared region. Then, in Chapter 3, we showed that empirical relationships between LAI and SVI were able to give a reasonable precision for generic relationships; however, genotype-scale relationships gave even better results. The same methodology applied on a DART simulated dataset lead to the same conclusions. An intermediate possibility of grouping the genotypes regarding their litter or leaf optical properties gave intermediate performance. We finally concluded about the superiority of NDVI to estimate LAI using a genotype-specific calibration. Overall, DART simulated datasets created in this work enable to calibrate different LAI -SVI relationships in terms of genotypes, sensors and acquisition characteristics.
publishDate 2016
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2016-06-17
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