Nagai S, Saitoh T, Suzuki R, Nasahara K, Lee WK, Son Y, Muraoka H. 2012. The necessity and availability of noise-free daily satellite-observed NDVI during rapid phenological changes in terrestrial ecosystems in East Asia Forest Science and Technology, 7(4), pp.174-183. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21580103.2011.643388
When the above article was first published, in Fig. 1(b) and Fig. 3(b), the color table for variance was incorrectly shown. The corrected figures for Fig. 1(b) and Fig. 3(b) are as below:
Figure captions:Figure 1(b). Variance of the number of observational days in the Terra/MODIS-observed daily high-quality NDVI data for each month over 10 years (2001–2010) in East Asia. Figure 3(b). Variance of the number of observational days of both Terra/MODIS- and Aqua/MODIS- observed daily high-quality NDVI data for each month during 7 years (2004–2010) in Japan and Korea. In the second sentence of the ‘Results’ section, we stated that: “In the arid region and on the Tibetan Plateau, the variance of NUMdays in January, February, and October–December was high (about 2–3; Figure 1b).” The corrected description is as below: In the arid region and on the Tibetan Plateau, the variance of NUMdays in January, February, and October–December was high (about 40–80 day2; Figure 1b). Taylor & Francis apologises for this error.
![Figure captions:Figure 1(b). Variance of the number of observational days in the Terra/MODIS-observed daily high-quality NDVI data for each month over 10 years (2001–2010) in East Asia. Figure 3(b). Variance of the number of observational days of both Terra/MODIS- and Aqua/MODIS- observed daily high-quality NDVI data for each month during 7 years (2004–2010) in Japan and Korea. In the second sentence of the ‘Results’ section, we stated that: “In the arid region and on the Tibetan Plateau, the variance of NUMdays in January, February, and October–December was high (about 2–3; Figure 1b).” The corrected description is as below: In the arid region and on the Tibetan Plateau, the variance of NUMdays in January, February, and October–December was high (about 40–80 day2; Figure 1b). Taylor & Francis apologises for this error.](/cms/asset/748dd80b-2070-4b5d-aab1-7747ff687166/tfst_a_897065_uf0001_oc.jpg)