Measuring short-term post-fire forest recovery across a burn severity gradient in a mixed pine-oak forest using multi-sensor remote sensing techniques

被引:93
作者
Meng, Ran [1 ]
Wu, Jin [1 ]
Zhao, Feng [2 ]
Cook, Bruce D. [3 ]
Hanavan, Ryan P. [4 ]
Serbin, Shawn P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Brookhaven Natl Lab, Environm & Climate Sci Dept, Upton, NY 11973 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Geog Sci, 1165 Lefrak Hall, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[3] NASA, Goddard Space Flight Ctr, Biospher Sci Branch, Greenbelt, MD 20742 USA
[4] US Forest Serv, USDA, Northeastern Area State & Private Forestry, 271 Mast Rd, Durham, NH 03824 USA
基金
美国能源部;
关键词
Burn severity; Species-specific post-fire responses; Fire adaptive strategies; WorldView-2; Vegetation classification; Hyperspectral data; Forest composition and structure; BOREAL FOREST; IMAGING SPECTROSCOPY; FIRE SEVERITY; TIME-SERIES; LIDAR DATA; VEGETATION RECOVERY; HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGE; MULTITEMPORAL LIDAR; SPECTRAL INDEX; CANADA FORESTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.rse.2018.03.019
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Understanding post-fire forest recovery is pivotal to the study of forest dynamics and global carbon cycle. Field based studies indicated a convex response of forest recovery rate to burn severity at the individual tree level, related with fire-induced tree mortality; however, these findings were constrained in spatial/temporal extents, while not detectable by traditional optical remote sensing studies, largely attributing to the contaminated effect from understory recovery. Here, we examined whether the combined use of multi-sensor remote sensing techniques (i.e., 1 m simultaneous airborne imaging spectroscopy and LiDAR and 2 m satellite multi-spectral imagery) to separate canopy recovery from understory recovery would enable to quantify post-fire forest recovery rate spanning a large gradient in burn severity over large-scales. Our study was conducted in a mixed pine-oak forest in Long Island, NY, three years after a top-killing fire. Our studies remotely detected an initial increase and then decline of forest recovery rate to burn severity across the burned area, with a maximum canopy area-based recovery rate of 10% per year at moderate forest burn severity class. More intriguingly, such remotely detected convex relationships also held at species level, with pine trees being more resilient to high burn severity and having a higher maximum recovery rate (12% per year) than oak trees (4% per year). These results are one of the first quantitative evidences showing the effects of fire adaptive strategies on post-fire forest recovery, derived from relatively large spatial-temporal scales. Our study thus provides the methodological advance to link multi sensor remote sensing techniques to monitor forest dynamics in a spatially explicit manner over large-scales, with important implications for fire-related forest management and constraining/benchmarking fire effect schemes in ecological process models.
引用
收藏
页码:282 / 296
页数:15
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