Relationship Between Remotely-sensed Vegetation Indices, Canopy Attributes and Plant Physiological Processes: What Vegetation Indices Can and Cannot Tell Us About the Landscape
University of Arizona · Arizona Geological Survey
Abstract
Vegetation indices (VIs) are among the oldest tools in remote sensing studies. Although many variations exist, most of them ratio the reflection of light in the red and NIR sections of the spectrum to separate the landscape into water, soil, and vegetation. Theoretical analyses and field studies have shown that VIs are near-linearly related to photosynthetically active radiation absorbed by a plant canopy, and therefore to light-dependent physiological processes, such as photosynthesis, occurring in the upper canopy. Practical studies have used time-series VIs to measure primary production and evapotranspiration, but these are limited in accuracy to that of the data used in ground truthing or calibrating the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 86
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Canopy
- Environmental science
- Vegetation (pathology)
- Leaf area index
- Photosynthetically active radiation
- Remote sensing
- Albedo (alchemy)
- Evapotranspiration
- Climate action