Abstract

Remotely monitoring changes in central U.S. grasslands is challenging because these landscapes tend to respond quickly to disturbances and changes in weather. Such dynamic responses influence nutrient cycling, greenhouse gas contributions, habitat availability for wildlife, and other ecosystem processes and services. Traditionally, coarse-resolution satellite data acquired at daily intervals have been used for monitoring. Recently, the harmonized Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2 (HLS) data increased the temporal frequency of the data. Here we investigated if the increased data frequency provided adequate observations to characterize highly dynamic grassland processes. We evaluated HLS data available for 2016 to (1) determine if data from Sentinel-2 contributed to an improvement in characterizing landscape processes over Landsat-8 data alone, and (2) quantify how observation frequency impacted results. Specifically, we investigated into estimating annual vegetation phenology, detecting burn scars from fire, and modeling within-season wetland hydroperiod and growth of aquatic vegetation. We observed increased sensitivity to the start of the growing season (SOST) with the HLS data. Our estimates of the grassland SOST compared well with ground estimates collected at a phenological camera site. We used the Continuous Change Detection and Classification (CCDC) algorithm to assess if the HLS data improved our detection of burn scars following grassland fires and found that detection was considerably influenced by the seasonal timing of the fires. The grassland burned in early spring recovered too quickly to be detected as change events by CCDC; instead, the spectral characteristics following these fires were incorporated as part of the ongoing time-series models. In contrast, the spectral effects from late-season fires were detected both by Landsat-8 data and HLS data. For wetland-rich areas, we used a modified version of the CCDC algorithm to track within-season dynamics of water and aquatic vegetation. The addition of Sentinel-2 data provided the potential to build full time series models to better distinguish different wetland types, suggesting that the temporal density of data was sufficient for within-season characterization of wetland dynamics. Although the different data frequency, in both the spatial and temporal dimensions, could cause inconsistent model estimation or sensitivity sometimes; overall, the temporal frequency of the HLS data improved our ability to track within-season grassland dynamics and improved results for areas prone to cloud contamination. The results suggest a greater frequency of observations, such as from harmonizing data across all comparable Landsat and Sentinel sensors, is still needed. For our study areas, at least a 3-day revisit interval during the early growing season (weeks 14–17) is required to provide a >50% probability of obtaining weekly clear observations.

Highlights

  • The U.S Great Plains provide habitats of global significance to migratory volant species [1,2,3]; important sources of food and fuel to cattle, wild ungulate species such as deer, and people; and serve a role in storing organic carbon [1,4,5]

  • Monitoring land surface seasonal dynamics and changes in the Great Plains is challenging because grasslands and wetlands are temporally dynamic and sensitive to disturbances and changes in weather [1,4,5,6,7,8]

  • There is a long history of applying time series of satellite data to remotely monitor vegetation characteristics, using data from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) [9,10,11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

The U.S Great Plains provide habitats of global significance to migratory volant species [1,2,3]; important sources of food and fuel to cattle, wild ungulate species such as deer, and people; and serve a role in storing organic carbon [1,4,5]. There is a long history of applying time series of satellite data to remotely monitor vegetation characteristics, using data from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) [9,10,11,12,13]. These sensors, aboard daily polar orbiting Earth observing satellites, provide the needed temporal resolution for observing seasonal dynamics. Satellite sensors that collect observations with higher spatial resolution have not provided sufficient revisit frequency or global coverage to track within-season dynamics [15]

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