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Original Articles

Mapping tree stress associated with urban pollution using the WorldView-2 Red Edge band

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Pages 200-209 | Received 21 May 2012, Accepted 19 Jul 2012, Published online: 28 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

A small urban park in Yerevan, Armenia, was studied using biogechemical analysis of the tree canopy, field spectral reflectance measurements of tree leaves, simulated WorldView-2 multispectral data generated from the leaf spectra, and two summer images of real WorldView-2 data. The tree canopy of the park is dominated by two trees, Robinia pseudoacacia L. (locust) and Fraxinus excelsior L. (ash). The Highest values of lead, nickel, molybdenum, copper and zinc were found in leaves harvested from trees adjacent to the streets, whereas most of the lowest values for those metals were found in the interior of the park. A t-test of the field spectral measurements indicated that the green and red edge spectral reflectance of leaves from trees near the streets was significantly higher than that of leaves of trees in the interior (p < 0.05). However, in simulated WorldView-2 multispectral data, the street and interior leaves were only statistically separable in band 6 (Red Edge) raw data and hyperspherical direction cosine (HSDC) normalized band 6 data. HSDC-normalized band 6 digital numbers from real WorldView-2 data of 16 June and 9 August 2011 from trees adjacent to the streets were statistically higher than the interior locations for both dates. Maps of anomalously high HSDC-normalized band 6 values show a concentration on the park edges, suggesting vehicle pollution may indeed be the cause of the observed patterns.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank two anonymous reviewers for their very helpful suggestions, and the organizers of the 2012 ERDAS IMAGINE – DigitalGlobe Geospatial Challenge for the WorldView-2 imagery used in this article. T. Warner thanks the West Virginia View and the Center for Ecological-Noosphere Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia for their financial support for fieldwork for this study.

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