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Original Articles

Using multiple radiometric correction images to estimate leaf area index

, , , , &
Pages 9441-9454 | Received 28 Nov 2008, Accepted 22 Nov 2010, Published online: 27 Sep 2011
 

Abstract

Ecological applications of remote-sensing techniques are generally limited to images after atmospheric correction, though other radiometric correction data are potentially valuable. In this article, six spectral vegetation indices (VIs) were derived from a SPOT 5 image at four radiometric correction levels: digital number (DN), at-sensor radiance (SR), top of atmosphere reflectance (TOA) and post-atmospheric correction reflectance (PAC). These VIs include the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), ratio vegetation index (RVI), slope ratio of radiation curve (K), general radiance level (L), visible-infrared radiation balance (B) and band radiance variation (V). They were then related to the leaf area index (LAI), acquired from in situ measurement in Hetian town, Fujian Province, China. The VI–LAI correlation coefficients varied greatly across vegetation types, VIs as well as image radiometric correction levels, and were not surely increased by image radiometric corrections. Among all 330 VI–LAI models established, the R 2 of multi-variable models were generally higher than those of the single-variable ones. The independent variables of the best VI–LAI models contained all VIs from all radiometric correction levels, showing the potentials of multi-radiometric correction images in LAI estimating. The results indicated that the use of VIs from multiple radiometric correction images can better exploit the capabilities of remote-sensing information, thus improving the accuracy of LAI estimating.

Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 40921061, 41071281), the National Basic Research Programme of China (2007CB407206) and the National R&D Infrastructure and Facility Development Programme – Earth System Science Data Sharing Network (2006DKA32300-15). We are very grateful for the helpful comments and suggestions from the anonymous reviewers, which improved the quality of this article.

Notes

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