Characterizing Seasonal Variation in Foliar Biochemistry with Airborne Imaging Spectroscopy
Abstract
Foliar biochemical traits are important indicators of ecosystem functioning and health that are difficult to characterize at large spatial and temporal scales using traditional measurements. However, comprehensive inventories of foliar traits are important to understanding ecosystem responses to anthropogenic and natural disturbances, as inputs into ecosystem process models, and for quantifying spatial variation in functional diversity. Imaging spectroscopy has been demonstrated as a valuable tool for developing maps of ecologically important foliar traits at large scales, but its application to mapping foliar traits over the course of the growing season has been limited. We collected high-resolution imaging spectroscopy data over Blackhawk Island, Wisconsin, USA at eight time points during the 2018 growing season (May October). Using partial least squares regression (PLSR) we developed predictive models applicable to all dates to produce canopy-level maps of eight traits related to ecophysiological function: chlorophyll content, leaf mass per area and concentrations of nitrogen, lignin, phenolics, calcium, phosphorus and potassium. The accuracies of our models varied across traits (R2: 0.25-0.86), traits with well-defined absorption features were retrieved with the highest accuracy including chlorophyll (R2: 0.86; %RMSE: 11.0) and total phenolics (R2: 0.86; %RMSE: 11.0). We also assessed how well our models estimated biochemistry on novel species and new dates using a cross-validation analysis. Similar to the full-season models chlorophyll and total phenolics were well estimated across dates and species, whereas calcium was estimated poorly on new species (R2: 0.05) and new dates (R2: 0.07). Our canopy-level maps of macronutrients (N, P and K) showed general trends of decreasing concentration over the course of the year, reflecting dilution by carbon-rich compounds during the growing season and resorption during senescence. Conversely, recalcitrant compounds including lignin and calcium increased until late summer, after which they stabilized. These results demonstrate the potential of current and proposed spaceborne imaging spectroscopy missions for mapping seasonal foliar biochemistry at a global scale.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2021
- Bibcode:
- 2021AGUFM.B35P1602C