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Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System

Understanding plant photosynthesis, or Gross Primary Production (GPP), is a crucial aspect of quantifying the terrestrial carbon cycle. Remote sensing approaches, in particular multi-angular spectroscopy, have proven successful for studying relationships between canopy-reflectance and plant-physiolo...

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Autores principales: Tortini, Riccardo, Hilker, Thomas, Coops, Nicholas C., Nesic, Zoran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4721823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26703602
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s151229906
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author Tortini, Riccardo
Hilker, Thomas
Coops, Nicholas C.
Nesic, Zoran
author_facet Tortini, Riccardo
Hilker, Thomas
Coops, Nicholas C.
Nesic, Zoran
author_sort Tortini, Riccardo
collection PubMed
description Understanding plant photosynthesis, or Gross Primary Production (GPP), is a crucial aspect of quantifying the terrestrial carbon cycle. Remote sensing approaches, in particular multi-angular spectroscopy, have proven successful for studying relationships between canopy-reflectance and plant-physiology processes, thus providing a mechanism to scale up. However, many different instrumentation designs exist and few cross-comparisons have been undertaken. This paper discusses the design evolution of the Automated Multiangular SPectro-radiometer for Estimation of Canopy reflectance (AMSPEC) series of instruments. Specifically, we assess the performance of the PP-Systems Unispec-DC and Ocean Optics JAZ-COMBO spectro-radiometers installed on an updated, tower-based AMSPEC-III system. We demonstrate the interoperability of these spectro-radiometers, and the results obtained suggest that JAZ-COMBO can successfully be used to substitute more expensive measurement units for detecting and investigating photosynthesis and canopy spectra. We demonstrate close correlations between JAZ-COMBO and Unispec-DC measured canopy radiance (0.75 ≤ R(2) ≤ 0.85) and solar irradiance (0.95 ≤ R(2) ≤ 0.96) over a three month time span. We also demonstrate close agreement between the bi-directional distribution functions obtained from each instrument. We conclude that cost effective alternatives may allow a network of AMSPEC-III systems to simultaneously monitor various vegetation types in different ecosystems. This will allow to scale and improve our understanding of the interactions between vegetation physiology and spectral characteristics, calibrate broad-scale observations to stand-level measurements, and ultimately lead to improved understanding of changing vegetation spectral features from satellite.
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spelling pubmed-47218232016-01-26 Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System Tortini, Riccardo Hilker, Thomas Coops, Nicholas C. Nesic, Zoran Sensors (Basel) Article Understanding plant photosynthesis, or Gross Primary Production (GPP), is a crucial aspect of quantifying the terrestrial carbon cycle. Remote sensing approaches, in particular multi-angular spectroscopy, have proven successful for studying relationships between canopy-reflectance and plant-physiology processes, thus providing a mechanism to scale up. However, many different instrumentation designs exist and few cross-comparisons have been undertaken. This paper discusses the design evolution of the Automated Multiangular SPectro-radiometer for Estimation of Canopy reflectance (AMSPEC) series of instruments. Specifically, we assess the performance of the PP-Systems Unispec-DC and Ocean Optics JAZ-COMBO spectro-radiometers installed on an updated, tower-based AMSPEC-III system. We demonstrate the interoperability of these spectro-radiometers, and the results obtained suggest that JAZ-COMBO can successfully be used to substitute more expensive measurement units for detecting and investigating photosynthesis and canopy spectra. We demonstrate close correlations between JAZ-COMBO and Unispec-DC measured canopy radiance (0.75 ≤ R(2) ≤ 0.85) and solar irradiance (0.95 ≤ R(2) ≤ 0.96) over a three month time span. We also demonstrate close agreement between the bi-directional distribution functions obtained from each instrument. We conclude that cost effective alternatives may allow a network of AMSPEC-III systems to simultaneously monitor various vegetation types in different ecosystems. This will allow to scale and improve our understanding of the interactions between vegetation physiology and spectral characteristics, calibrate broad-scale observations to stand-level measurements, and ultimately lead to improved understanding of changing vegetation spectral features from satellite. MDPI 2015-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4721823/ /pubmed/26703602 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s151229906 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tortini, Riccardo
Hilker, Thomas
Coops, Nicholas C.
Nesic, Zoran
Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title_full Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title_fullStr Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title_full_unstemmed Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title_short Technological Advancement in Tower-Based Canopy Reflectance Monitoring: The AMSPEC-III System
title_sort technological advancement in tower-based canopy reflectance monitoring: the amspec-iii system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4721823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26703602
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s151229906
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