0000000000338256

AUTHOR

Jing Tang

0000-0001-7961-8214

showing 2 related works from this author

Combining hyperspectral UAV and multispectral Formosat-2 imagery for precision agriculture applications

2014

Remote sensing is a key tool for precision agriculture applications as it is capable of capturing spatial and temporal variations in crop status. However, satellites often have an inadequate spatial resolution for precision agriculture applications. High-resolution Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) imagery can be obtained at flexible dates, but operational costs may limit the collection frequency. The current study utilizes data fusion to create a dataset which benefits from the temporal resolution of Formosat-2 imagery and the spatial resolution of UAV imagery with the purpose of monitoring crop growth in a potato field. The correlation of the Weighted Difference Vegetation Index (WDVI) from …

precision agricultureComputer sciencebusiness.industryUAVMultispectral imageHyperspectral imagingcomputer.software_genreSensor fusionPE&RCField (geography)Laboratory of Geo-information Science and Remote SensingWDVIunmixing-based data fusionTemporal resolutionComputer visionLaboratorium voor Geo-informatiekunde en Remote SensingArtificial intelligencePrecision agricultureSTARFMbusinesscomputerImage resolutionData integrationRemote sensing
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Atmospheric brightening counteracts warming‐induced delays in autumn phenology of temperate trees in Europe

2021

Aim: Ongoing climate warming has been widely reported to delay autumn phenology, which in turn impacts carbon, water, energy and nutrient balances at regional and global scales. However, the underlying mechanisms of autumn phenology responses to climate change have not been fully elucidated. The aims of this study were to determine whether brightening that was defined as the increase of surface solar radiation and warming during recent decades affect autumn phenology in opposite directions and explore the underlying mechanisms. Location: Central Europe. Time period: 1950–2016. Major taxa studied: Four dominant European tree species in central Europe: Aesculus hippocastanum, Betula pendula, …

temperature sensitivitySenescenceGlobal and Planetary ChangeEcologybiologyEconomicsleaf senescencePhenologyEcologyGlobal warmingbrighteningClimate changebiology.organism_classificationclimate warmingradiationQuercus roburChemistryHorticultureFagus sylvaticaBetula pendulaTemperate climateautumn phenologyBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGlobal Ecology and Biogeography
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