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Detection of initial damage in Norway spruce canopies using hyperspectral airborne data
Authors:P. K. Entcheva Campbell  B. N. Rock  M. E. Martin  C. D. Neefus  J. R. Irons  E. M. Middleton
Affiliation:1. Complex Systems Research Centre , University of New Hampshire , Durham, NH, 03824, USA;2. Department of Plant Biology , University of New Hampshire , Durham, NH, 03824, USA;3. Biospheric Sciences Branch , NASA Goddard Space Flight Center , Greenbelt, MD, 20771, USA
Abstract:Current broadband sensors are not capable of separating the initial stages of forest damage. The current investigation evaluates the potential of hyperspectral data for detecting the initial stages of forest damage at the canopy level in the Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst) forests of Czech Republic. Hyperspectral canopy reflectance imagery and foliar samples were acquired contemporaneously for 23 study sites in August 1998. The sites were selected along an air pollution gradient to represent the full range of damage conditions in even-aged spruce forests. The changes in canopy and foliar reflectance, chemistry and pigments associated with forest damage were established. The potential of a large number of spectral indices to identify initial forest damage was determined. Canopy hyperspectral data were able to separate healthy from initially damaged canopies, and therefore provided an improved capability for assessment of forest physiology as compared to broadband systems. The 673-724 nm region exhibited maximum sensitivity to initial damage. The nine spectral indices having the highest potential as indicators of the initial damage included: three simple band ratios, two derivative indices, two modelled red-edge parameters and two normalized bands. The sensitivity of these indices to damage was explained primarily by their relationship to foliar structural chemical compounds, which differed significantly by damage class.
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