A wetness index using terrain-corrected surface temperature and normalized difference vegetation index derived from standard MODIS products: An evaluation of its use in a humid forest-dominated region of eastern Canada

被引:60
作者
Hassan, Quazi K. [1 ]
Bourque, Charles P. -A.
Meng, Fan-Rui
Cox, Roger M.
机构
[1] Univ New Brunswick, Fac Forestry & Environm Management, Fredericton, NB E3B 6C2, Canada
[2] Lanzhou Reg Climate Ctr, Lanzhou 730020, Gansu, Peoples R China
[3] Atlantic Forest Serv, Canadian Forest Serv, Nat Resources Canada, Fredericton, NB E3B 5L7, Canada
关键词
MODIS standard products; normalized difference vegetation index; surface potential temperature; soils; temperature-vegetation wetness index; vegetation; water content;
D O I
10.3390/s7102028
中图分类号
O65 [分析化学];
学科分类号
070302 ; 081704 ;
摘要
In this paper we develop a method to estimate land-surface water content in a mostly forest-dominated (humid) and topographically-varied region of eastern Canada. The approach is centered on a temperature-vegetation wetness index (TVWI) that uses standard 8-day MODIS-based image composites of land surface temperature (T-s) and surface reflectance as primary input. In an attempt to improve estimates of TVWI in high elevation areas, terrain-induced variations in T-s are removed by applying grid, digital elevation model-based calculations of vertical atmospheric pressure to calculations of surface potential temperature (theta(s)). Here, theta(s) corrects T-s to the temperature value to what it would be at mean sea level (i. e., similar to 101.3 kPa) in a neutral atmosphere. The vegetation component of the TVWI uses 8-day composites of surface reflectance in the calculation of normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) values. TVWI and corresponding wet and dry edges are based on an interpretation of scatterplots generated by plotting theta(s) as a function of NDVI. A comparison of spatially-averaged field measurements of volumetric soil water content (VSWC) and TVWI for the 2003-2005 period revealed that variation with time to both was similar in magnitudes. Growing season, point mean measurements of VSWC and TVWI were 31.0% and 28.8% for 2003, 28.6% and 29.4% for 2004, and 40.0% and 38.4% for 2005, respectively. An evaluation of the long-term spatial distribution of land-surface wetness generated with the new theta(s)-NDVI function and a process-based model of soil water content showed a strong relationship (i. e., r(2) = 95.7%).
引用
收藏
页码:2028 / 2048
页数:21
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]  
Allen R. G., 1998, FAO Irrigation and Drainage Paper
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1996, NATL ECOLOGICAL FRAM
[3]   Biophysical and potential vegetation growth surfaces for a small watershed in northern Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada [J].
Bourque, CPA ;
Meng, FR ;
Gullison, JJ ;
Bridgland, J .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE, 2000, 30 (08) :1179-1195
[4]   Spatial extent of winter thaw events in eastern North America: historical weather records in relation to yellow birch decline [J].
Bourque, CPA ;
Cox, RM ;
Allen, DJ ;
Arp, PA ;
Meng, FR .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2005, 11 (09) :1477-1492
[5]   AN INTERPRETATION OF METHODOLOGIES FOR INDIRECT MEASUREMENT OF SOIL-WATER CONTENT [J].
CARLSON, TN ;
GILLIES, RR ;
SCHMUGGE, TJ .
AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 1995, 77 (3-4) :191-205
[6]   An overview of the "triangle method" for estimating surface evapotranspiration and soil moisture from satellite imagery [J].
Carlson, Toby .
SENSORS, 2007, 7 (08) :1612-1629
[7]   Late-summer carbon fluxes from Canadian forests and peatlands along an east-west continental transect [J].
Coursolle, Carole ;
Margolis, Hank A. ;
Barr, Alan G. ;
Black, T. Andrew ;
Amiro, Brian D. ;
McCaughey, J. Harry ;
Flanagan, Lawrence B. ;
Lafleur, Peter M. ;
Roulet, Nigel T. ;
Bourque, Charles P. -A. ;
Arain, M. Altaf ;
Wofsy, Steven C. ;
Dunn, Allison ;
Morgenstern, Kai ;
Orchansky, Alberto L. ;
Bernier, Pierre Y. ;
Chen, Jing M. ;
Kidston, Joe ;
Saigusa, Nobuko ;
Hedstrom, Newell .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2006, 36 (03) :783-800
[8]  
Dupigny-Giroux LA, 1999, PHOTOGRAMM ENG REM S, V65, P937
[9]   Drought affects the competitive interactions between Fagus sylvatica seedlings and an early successional species, Rubus fruticosus:: responses of growth, water status and δ13C composition [J].
Fotelli, MN ;
Gessler, A ;
Peuke, AD ;
Rennenberg, H .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2001, 151 (02) :427-435
[10]  
GALLANT J, 1996, COMPLEX WETNESS INDE