Abstract

Terrestrial gross primary productivity (GPP) is a critical part of land carbon fluxes. Accurately quantifying GPP in terrestrial ecosystems and understanding its spatiotemporal dynamics are essential for assessing the capability of vegetation to absorb carbon from the atmosphere. Nevertheless, traditional remote sensing estimation models often require complex parameters and data inputs, and they do not account for spatial effects resulting from the distribution of monitoring sites. This can lead to biased parameter estimation and unstable results. To address these challenges, we have raised a spatial autocorrelation light gradient boosting machine model (SA-LGBM) to enhance GPP estimation. SA-LGBM combines reflectance information from remote sensing observations with eigenvector spatial filtering (ESF) methods to create a set of variables that capture continuous spatiotemporal variations in plant functional types and GPP. SA-LGBM demonstrates promising results when compared to existing GPP products. With the inclusion of eigenvectors, we observed an 8.5% increase in R2 and a 20.8% decrease in RMSE. Furthermore, the residuals of the model became more random, reducing the inherent spatial effects within them. In summary, SA-LGBM represents the first attempt to quantify the impact of spatial autocorrelation and addresses the limitations of underestimation present in existing GPP products. Moreover, SA-LGBM exhibits favorable applicability across various vegetation types.

Full Text
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