Abstract

Reflectance spectra of rock encrusting lichens were acquired to determine the influence that this vegetation type may have on the reflectance properties of rock exposures located in high latitude and subarctic environments. The samples investigated consist of crustose and foliose lichen species collected from exposures of the Gog quartzite formation in Alberta, Canada. Lichen transmittance was estimated to be <3% throughout the 350–2500-nm spectral region, using spectra measured from the foliose lichen, Umbilicaria torrefacta, as a representative sample of a broader class of lichens. These findings suggest that lichen prevents the transmission of light to the underlying rock substrate. Therefore, the subpixel influence of lichen and rock within a scene can be considered linearly weighted. Discrimination of lichen species is made possible using ratios of reflectance at 400/685 and 773/685 nm. An index using the band ratios 2132/2198 and 2232/2198 nm shows the similarity of lichen spectra in the infrared and a distinguishing feature between rocks with OH bearing minerals and lichen. Thus, spectral unmixing of rock and crustose/foliose lichens may be successfully accomplished using a single lichen end-member for this spectral range.

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