Abstract
ABSTRACT High spatial resolution satellite imagery provides an alternative for time consuming and labor intensive in situ measurements of biophysical variables, such as chlorophyll and water content. However, despite the high spatial resolution of current satellite sensors, mixtures of canopies and backgrounds will be present, hampering the estimation of biophysical variables. Traditional correction methodologies use spectral differences between canopies and backgrounds, but fail with spectrally similar canopies and backgrounds. In this study, the lack of a generic solution to reduce background effects is tackled. Through synthetic imagery, the mixture problem was demonstrated with regards to the estimation of biophysical variables. A correction method was proposed, rescaling vegetation indices based on the canopy cover fraction. Furthermore, the proposed method was compar ed to traditional background correction methodologies (i.e. soil-adjusted vegetation indices and signal unmixing) for different background scenarios. The results of a soil background scenario showed the inability of soil-adjusted vegetation indices to reduce background admixture effects, while signal unmixing and the proposed method removed background influences for chlorophyll ( ¨ R² = ~0.3; ¨ RMSE = ~1.6 µg/cm²) and water (¨ R² = ~0.3; ¨ RMSE = ~0.5 mg/cm²) related vegetation indices. For the weed background scenario, signal unmixing was unable to remove the background influences for chlorophyll content ( ¨ R² = -0.1; ¨ RMSE = -0.6 µg/cm²), while the proposed correction method reduced background effects (¨ R² = 0.1; ¨ RMSE = 0.4 µg/cm²). Overall, the proposed vegetation index correction method reduced the background influence irrespective of background type, making useful comparison between management blocks possible. Keywords: Biophysical variables, mixture problem, orchards, canopy cover fraction, vegetation indices
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