Abstract

AbstractArctic vegetation phenology is a sensitive indicator of a changing climate, and rapid assessment of vegetation status is necessary to more comprehensively understand the impacts on foliar condition and photosynthetic activity. Airborne and space‐borne optical remote sensing has been successfully used to monitor vegetation phenology in Arctic ecosystems by exploiting the biophysical and biochemical changes associated with vegetation growth and senescence. However, persistent cloud cover and low sun angles in the region make the acquisition of high‐quality temporal optical data within one growing season challenging. In the following study, we examine the capability of “near‐field” remote sensing technologies, in this case digital, true‐color cameras to produce surrogate in situ spectral data to characterize changes in vegetation driven by seasonal pigment dynamics. Simple linear regression was used to investigate relationships between common pigment‐driven spectral indices calculated from field‐based spectrometry and red, green, and blue (RGB) indices from corresponding digital photographs in three dominant vegetation communities across three major seasons at Toolik Lake, North Slope, Alaska. We chose the strongest and most consistent RGB index across all communities to represent each spectral index. Next, linear regressions were used to relate RGB indices and extracted leaf‐level pigment content with a simple additive error propagation of the root mean square error. Results indicate that the green‐based RGB indices had the strongest relationship with chlorophyll a and total chlorophyll, while a red‐based RGB index showed moderate relationships with the chlorophyll to carotenoid ratio. The results suggest that vegetation color contributes strongly to the response of pigment‐driven spectral indices and RGB data can act as a surrogate to track seasonal vegetation change associated with pigment development and degradation. Overall, we find that low‐cost, easy‐to‐use digital cameras can monitor vegetation status and changes related to seasonal foliar condition and photosynthetic activity in three dominant, low‐Arctic vegetation communities.

Highlights

  • Changes to the functioning of Arctic ecosystems, such as shifts in photosynthetic activity, net primary productivity, and species composition influence global climate change and the resulting feedbacks (Zhang et al 2007, Bhatt et al 2010, Parmentier and Christensen 2013)

  • We examine the capability of in situ, true-color digital photography to act as a surrogate for in situ spectral data in assessing pigment-driven vegetation changes associated with three key seasons representing early, peak, and late season, in three dominant, low-Arctic tundra vegetation communities

  • Data were acquired in the Toolik Vegetation Grid, a 1 9 1 km long-term monitoring site established by the National Science Foundation (NSF) as part of the Department of Energy’s R4D (Response, Resistance, Resilience, and Recovery to Disturbance in Arctic Ecosystems) project (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Changes to the functioning of Arctic ecosystems, such as shifts in photosynthetic activity, net primary productivity, and species composition influence global climate change and the resulting feedbacks (Zhang et al 2007, Bhatt et al 2010, Parmentier and Christensen 2013). Characterizing key biophysical properties of Arctic vegetation associated with these three benchmark phenological phases is important for accurate monitoring and quantification of local and regional changes in Arctic vegetation and in turn Arctic and global changes to energy and carbon cycling, as well as associated feedbacks. The presence and seasonal changes in vegetation pigment content can be used to infer biophysical properties including photosynthetic activity and foliar condition at key phenological phases of Arctic vegetation

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