Search results for "canopy"

showing 10 items of 221 documents

Micrometeorological and sap flow measurement of water vapour exchanges in olive: Scaling up from canopy to orchard

2009

A comparison of water consumption evaluated at tree and orchard level was carried out in a commercial olive orchard located in Sicily using up-scaled sap-flow evapotranspiration estimations and eddy covariance measurements. Sap flow probes were installed on olive trees placed in one of the four plots characterizing a heterogeneous orchard. Trees were chosen, from a preliminary footprint analysis, in correspondence to the peak of the “relative normalized contribution” to flux for the prevailing wind conditions measured by an eddy covariance station localized in the central part of the orchard. Tree-age and planting density as well as main tree and orchard characteristics (Leaf Area per tree,…

CanopyHydrologyHorticultureCovarianceFlow measurementSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeAgronomyEvapotranspirationEnvironmental scienceolive sap flow eddy covariance tree transpiration soil evaporationOrchardScalingWater useWater vapor
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Spatial throughfall heterogeneity in a montane rain forest in Ecuador: Extent, temporal stability and drivers

2009

Summary The drivers of spatial throughfall heterogeneity are still not fully understood. At an undisturbed forest site in the Ecuadorian Andes with ca. 2600 mm of annual rainfall we determined the accuracy of throughfall measurements by comparing Hellmann-type funnel gauges with troughs. At the same undisturbed and a managed, selectively-logged forest site we determined spatial variability of throughfall, temporal stability of spatial variability and the controls of spatial throughfall variability using a 4-year dataset in weekly resolution. There were no systematic differences between the collected volumes of funnel gauges and troughs. Based on the statistical distribution of annual throug…

CanopyHydrologyHydrology (agriculture)Rain gaugeEnvironmental scienceSpatial variabilityRainforestWater cycleInterceptionThroughfallWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Hydrology
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Monitoring Yield and Fruit quality parameters in Open-Canopy Tree crops under Water Stress. Implications for ASTER

2007

Work on water stress detection at tree and orchard levels using a high-spatial airborne thermal sensor is presented, showing its connection with yield and some fruit quality indicators in olive and peach commercial orchards under different irrigation regimes. Two airborne campaigns were conducted with the Airborne Hyperspectral Scanner (AHS) over olive and peach orchards located in Córdoba, southern Spain. The AHS sensor was flown at three different times on 25 July 2004 and 16 July 2005, collecting 2 m spatial resolution imagery in 80 spectral bands in the 0.43– 12.5 μm spectral range. Thermal bands were assessed for the retrieval of land surface temperature using the split-window algorith…

CanopyHydrologyIrrigationFruit qualitybiologyWater stressAHSSoil ScienceGeologyRemote sensingbiology.organism_classificationOlive treesASTERHorticultureThermalAirborneEnvironmental scienceComputers in Earth SciencesOrchardIrrigation managementAster (genus)Water contentTESFruit treeRemote sensing
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Laboratory Measurements of Flow and Turbulence in Discontinuous Distributions of Ligulate Seagrass

2007

Turbulent flow characteristics were investigated in laboratory flume studies of a ligulate plant canopy interrupted by a gap representing discontinuities observed in seagrass prairies. The reliability of velocity measurements obtained using an acoustic Doppler velocimeter within the canopy was shown using specifically designed experiments. In relatively fast flow (mean velocity 5.5 cm s−1), the mean flow profile was logarithmic above the canopy, had an inflection point near its top, and uniformly low values within it. Within the gap, a recirculation cell formed. Reynolds stress maxima were approximately coincident with the mean flow inflection point. Quadrant analysis revealed an ejection-d…

CanopyHydrologyTurbulenceMechanical EngineeringGeometryReynolds stressFlow measurementFlumeInflection pointMean flowAcoustic Doppler velocimetryGeologyWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringJournal of Hydraulic Engineering
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2021

Abstract Remote sensing-based measurements of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) are useful for assessing plant functioning at different spatial and temporal scales. SIF is the most direct measure of photosynthesis and is therefore considered important to advance capacity for the monitoring of gross primary production (GPP) while it has also been suggested that its yield facilitates the early detection of vegetation stress. However, due to the influence of different confounding effects, the apparent SIF signal measured at canopy level differs from the fluorescence emitted at leaf level, which makes its physiological interpretation challenging. One of these effects is the scatterin…

CanopyImaging spectrometerSoil SciencePrimary productionGeologyFar-redPhotosynthetic efficiencyAtmospheric sciencesPhotosynthesisPhotosynthetically active radiationEnvironmental scienceComputers in Earth SciencesChlorophyll fluorescenceRemote sensingRemote Sensing of Environment
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Latent heat flux variability and response to drought stress of black poplar: A multi-platform multi-sensor remote and proximal sensing approach to re…

2022

Abstract High-throughput mapping of latent heat flux (λET) is critical to efforts to optimize water resources management and to accelerate forest tree breeding for improved drought tolerance. Ideally, investigation of the energy response at the tree level may promote tailored irrigation strategies and, thus, maximize crop biomass productivity. However, data availability is limited and planning experimental campaigns in the field can be highly operationally complex. To this end, a multi-platform multi-sensor observational approach is herein developed to dissect the λET signature of a black poplar (Populus nigra) breeding population (“POP6”) at the canopy level. POP6 comprised more than 4600 …

CanopyIrrigationeducation.field_of_studysatellite remote sensingUAV remote sensingEvapotranspirationbiologyDrought tolerancePopulationSoil ScienceGeologybiology.organism_classificationBlack poplarMulti-platformmulti-resolutionAgronomyLatent heatEnvironmental scienceTree breedingPriestley-Taylor equationComputers in Earth ScienceseducationWater contentSettore ICAR/06 - Topografia E CartografiaRemote sensingRemote Sensing of Environment
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Mapping Carbon Stocks In Central And South America With Smap Vegetation Optical Depth

2019

Mapping carbon stocks in the tropics is essential for climate change mitigation. Passive microwave remote sensing allows estimating carbon from deep canopy layers through the Vegetation Optical Depth (VOD) parameter. Although their spatial resolution is coarser than that of optical vegetation indices or airborne Lidar data, microwaves present a higher penetration capacity at low frequencies (L-band) and avoid cloud masking. This work compares the relationships of airborne carbon maps in Central and South America with both (i) SMAP L-band VOD at 9 km gridding and (ii) MODIS Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI). Models to estimate carbon stocks are built from these two satellite-derived variables.…

CanopyL bandTeledetecció010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesRadiofreqüència0208 environmental biotechnologyClimate changeOptical radar02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesComunicacions òptiquesCarboniImage resolution0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingVegetation mappingVegetationOptical communicationsTropicsEnhanced vegetation indexRemote sensing:Enginyeria de la telecomunicació [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Carbon020801 environmental engineering:Enginyeria de la telecomunicació::Telecomunicació òptica [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Climate change mitigationRemote sensing by laser beamSpatial ecologyEnvironmental scienceSistemes de gestió mediambientalIGARSS 2019 - 2019 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium
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Sensitivity of L-band vegetation optical depth to carbon stocks in tropical forests: a comparison to higher frequencies and optical indices

2019

Supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2019.111303. Monitoring vegetation carbon in tropical regions is essential to the global carbon assessment and to evaluate the actions oriented to the reduction of forest degradation. Mainly, satellite optical vegetation indices and LiDAR data have been used to this purpose. These two techniques are limited by cloud cover and are sensitive only to the top of vegetation. In addition, the vegetation attenuation to the soil microwave emission, represented by the vegetation optical depth (VOD), has been applied for biomass estimation using frequencies ranging from 4 to 30¿GHz (C- to K-bands). Atmosphere is t…

CanopyL bandTropical forestsL-band010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesCarbon densityCloud cover0208 environmental biotechnologySoil ScienceClimate change02 engineering and technologyCarbon sequestrationAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciencesClimate changeSatellite imageryVegetation optical depthComputers in Earth Sciences0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingTropicsGeology:Enginyeria de la telecomunicació [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]020801 environmental engineeringSistemes de comunicació de microonesLidarEnvironmental scienceMicrowave communication systemsSoil moistureSistemes de gestió mediambientalSòls -- Humitat
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A Model-Based Approach for the Recovery of Forest Attributes Using Airborne Laser Scanning Data

2013

As three-dimensional wall-to-wall information on forest structure, ALS echoes provide information on the growing stock and canopy structure. Even though the ALS echo heights are associated with the dimensions of trees, a theoretical model to relate ALS data with interesting forest attributes is missing. The recorded observation of echo height can be viewed as an outcome of a complex process mixing several random sub-processes related to the forest and the atmosphere in a non-trivial way. The forest-related processes include those generating stand density, tree heights, tree locations, tree crown shapes, and the internal structure of tree crowns. This chapter presents our recent work on deve…

CanopyLaser scanningForest structureRandomnessMathematicsRemote sensing
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Multi-Frequency Estimation of Canopy Penetration Depths from SMAP/AMSR2 Radiometer and IceSAT Lidar Data

2018

In this study, the $\tau-\omega$ model framework is used to derive extinction coefficient and canopy penetration depths from multi-frequency SMAP and AMSR2 retrievals of vegetation optical depth together with ICESat LiDAR vegetation heights. The vegetation extinction coefficient serves as an indicator of how strong absorption and scattering processes within the canopy attenuate microwaves at $\mathrm{L}$ and C-band. Through inversion of the extinction coefficient, the penetration depth into the canopy can be obtained, which is analyzed on local (Sahel, Illinois) and continental scale (Africa, parts of North America) as well as for a one year time series (04/2015-04/2016). First analyses of …

CanopyLidarRadiometerVegetation010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesextinctionAttenuation0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyPenetration (firestop)SMAPMolar absorptivityAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciencesLidarPenetration depthEnvironmental scienceAMSR2RadiometerPenetration depthWater content021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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