Abstract

A new generation of multiwavelength lidars offers the potential to measure the structure and biochemistry of vegetation simultaneously, using range resolved spectral indices to overcome the confounding effects in passive optical measurements. However, the reflectance of leaves depends on the angle of incidence, and if this dependence varies between wavelengths, the resulting spectral indices will also vary with the angle of incidence, complicating their use in separating structural and biochemical effects in vegetation canopies. The Salford Advanced Laser Canopy Analyser (SALCA) dual-wavelength terrestrial laser scanner was used to measure the angular dependence of reflectance for a range of leaves at the wavelengths used by the new generation of multiwavelength lidars, 1063 and 1545 nm, as used by SALCA, DWEL, and the Optech Titan. The influence of the angle of incidence on the normalized difference index (NDI) of these wavelengths was also assessed. The reflectance at both wavelengths depended on the angle of incidence and could be well modelled as a cosine. The change in the NDI with the leaf angle of incidence was small compared with the observed difference in the NDI between fresh and dry leaves and between leaf and bark. Therefore, it is concluded that angular effects will not significantly impact leaf moisture retrievals or prevent leaf/bark separation for the wavelengths used in the new generation of 1063- and 1545-nm multiwavelength lidars.

Highlights

  • T ERRESTRIAL vegetation plays a key role in many processes, and knowledge of its structure and biochemistry is needed to understand its function

  • This paper investigates whether the wavelengths used in the two currently operational dual-wavelength, fullwaveform Terrestrial laser scanner (TLS) instruments, Salford Advanced Laser Canopy Analyser (SALCA), and DWEL (Dual-Wavelength Echidna Lidar) [20], [21], have significantly different phase functions and so will cause the derived spectral indices, such as the normalized difference index (NDI) [see (1)] to vary

  • It is concluded that whilst reflectance of vegetation at the wavelengths used by the new generation of multiwavelength lidars (1063 nm in the near infrared (NIR) and 1545 nm in the shortwave infrared (SWIR)) showed angular effects, the impact of this on the NDI was small, smaller than the uncertainty from instrument noise

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Summary

Introduction

T ERRESTRIAL vegetation plays a key role in many processes, and knowledge of its structure and biochemistry is needed to understand its function.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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