Search results for "leaf area"

showing 10 items of 124 documents

A tractor mounted scanning LIDAR for the non-destructive measurement of vegetative volume and surface area of tree-row plantations: A comparison with…

2009

The use of a low-cost tractor-mounted scanning Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) system for capable of making non-destructive recordings of tree-row structure in orchards and vineyards is described. Field tests consisted of several LIDAR measurements on both sides of the crop row, before and after defoliation of selected trees. Summary parameters describing the tree-row volume and the total crop surface area viewed by the LIDAR (expressed as a ratio with ground surface area) were derived using a suitable numerical algorithm. The results for apple and pear orchards and a wine producing vineyard were shown to be in reasonable agreement with the results derived from a destructive leaf sampli…

Tractorbusiness.product_categoryOptical instrumentSoil ScienceOptical radarGeometrical characteristics of plantsVineyardlaw.inventionlaw3D Plant structureLeaf area index:Enginyeria agroalimentària::Enginyeria del medi rural::Maquinària agrícola [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]Remote sensingLidarLàsers -- AplicacionsLeaf Area IndexRadar òpticLAIArbresTree (data structure)LidarVolume (thermodynamics)Control and Systems EngineeringEnvironmental sciencebusinessAgronomy and Crop ScienceFood ScienceWoody plant
researchProduct

A combined optical-microwave method to retrieve soil moisture over vegetated areas

2011

A simple approach for correcting for the effect of vegetation in the estimation of the surface soil moisture (wS) from L-band passive microwave observations is presented in this study. The approach is based on semi-empirical relationships between soil moisture and the polarized reflectivity including the effect of the vegetation optical depth which is parameterized as a function of the normalized vegetation difference index (NDVI). The method was tested against in situ measurements collected over a grass site from 2004 to 2007 (SMOSREX experiment). Two polarizations (horizontal/vertical) and five incidence angles (20◦, 30◦, 40◦, 50◦, and 60◦) were considered in the analysis. The best wS est…

Vegetation optical depthL band010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesNDVItélédétection0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil science02 engineering and technologyMicrowave methodsurface temperature01 natural sciencesNormalized Difference Vegetation Index[SDV.EE.ECO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/EcosystemsNDVI;LAI;LEAF AREA INDEX;SURFACE TEMPERATURE;SOIL MOISTURE;L-BAND medicineTraitement du signal et de l'imagenormalized vegetation difference index (NDVI)Electrical and Electronic EngineeringWater contentComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingSignal and Image processingsurface temperature.soil moisture (SM)Enhanced vegetation index15. Life on landLAIL-bandSOIL MOISTUREGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental sciencemicrowave radiometrymedicine.symptomLEAF AREA INDEXVegetation (pathology)[SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processingMicrowave
researchProduct

Intercomparison of instruments for measuring leaf area index over rice

2015

Leaf area index (LAI) is a key biophysical parameter used to determine foliage cover and crop growth in environmental studies in order to assess crop yield. LAI estimates can be classified as direct or indirect methods. Direct methods are destructive, time consuming, and difficult to apply over large fields. Indirect methods are non-destructive and cost-effective due to its portability, accuracy and repeatability. In this study, we compare indirect LAI estimates acquired from two classical instruments such as LAI-2000 and digital cameras for hemispherical photography, with LAI estimates acquired with a smart app (PocketLAI) installed on a mobile smartphone. In this work it is shown that LAI…

VegetationHemispherical photographyriceCrop growthAgricultureIndexesRemote sensingCamerassmartphoneFoliage coverMeteorologyPhotographyLeaf Area Index (LAI)Environmental scienceLeaf area indexInstrumentsRemote sensing2015 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
researchProduct

Ecophysiological analysis of the nitrophily of weed species

2013

International audience

[SDE] Environmental Sciencesleaf areaellenberg N score[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]nitrogen[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]plant species[SDE]Environmental Sciences[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyoligotrophyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSnitrophilyweed
researchProduct

Performances of neural networks for deriving LAI estimates from existing CYCLOPES and MODIS products

2008

International audience; This paper evaluates the performances of a neural network approach to estimate LAI from CYCLOPES and MODIS nadir normalized reflectance and LAI products. A data base was generated from these products over the BELMANIP sites during the 2001-2003 period. Data were aggregated at 3 km x 3 km, resampled at 1/16 days temporal frequency and filtered to reject outliers. VEGETATION and MODIS reflectances show very consistent values in the red, near infrared and short wave infrared bands. Neural networks were trained over part of this data base for each of the 6 MODIS biome classes to retrieve both MODIS and CYCLOPES LAI products. Results show very good performances of neural …

[SPI.OTHER]Engineering Sciences [physics]/OtherMean squared errorBiome0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil Science02 engineering and technologyNEURAL NETWORKSStandard deviationALBEDONadirComputers in Earth SciencesLeaf area indexLEA021101 geological & geomatics engineeringRemote sensingMathematicsCYCLOPESGeology04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesVegetation15. Life on landCONSISTENCY OF PRODUCTSRESEAU DE NEURONESMODISTemporal resolutionOutlier040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesVEGETATIONLEAF AREA INDEX
researchProduct

Transport and partitioning of 13C-photoassimilate between peach fruiting shoots

2008

We used a non-intrusive method (13CO2 feeding) and a manipulative approach to see whether fruiting shoots in peach trees are autonomous or may import carbon from neighboring shoots under forced conditions, and whether the degree of autonomy is influenced by the source-sink relationship on the shoot. In three experiments, leaf to fruit ratio (L:F) of selected fruiting shoots was moderately (2005 and 2006) or strongly (extreme enforcing 2006) altered to either encourage or discourage movement of carbon from 13C-labeled sending shoots (SFS) to receiving fruiting shoots (RFS), both located on the same main scaffold of V-shaped peach trees. At stage I and III of fruit growth, fruit and shoot tip…

branch autonomy carbon isotopes fruiting shoot leaf area Prunus persica sink strength source-sink relations
researchProduct

Growth stage and conditions affect sorbitol:sucrose ratio in peach source and sink organs

2008

Along with sucrose, sorbitol represents the major photosynthetic product and the main form of translocated carbon in peach. In leaves, the ability to synthesize and accumulate sorbitol and sucrose increases with leaf age or distance from the apex until full maturity. Also, in the internodes of a growing shoot sorbitol:sucrose ratio (SOR:SUC) increases with distance from the apex. In mature leaves, SOR:SUC increases in response to fruit sink removal and water deficit, due mainly to sorbitol rather than sucrose accumulation. Data from ‘Encore’ peach show that SOR:SUC remains fairly constant around 2:1 from the leaf blade all the way to the fruit peduncle and drops sharply in the fruit flesh a…

carbohydrates crop load fruit leaf area root tip shoot tip
researchProduct

Retrieval of chlorophyll content and LAI of crops using hyperspectral techniques: application to PROBA/CHRIS data

2008

Hyperspectral/multiangular data allow the retrieval of important vegetation properties at canopy level, such as the Leaf Area Index (LAI) and Leaf Chlorophyll Content. Current methods are based on the relationship between biophysical properties and retrievals from those spectral bands (from the complete hyperspectral/multiangular information) where specific absorption features are present within the considered spectral range. Furthermore, new sensors such as PROBA/CHRIS provide continuous hyperspectral reflectance measurements that can be considered as a continuous function of wavelength. The mathematical analysis of these continuous functions allows a new way of exploiting the relationship…

chemistry.chemical_compoundChlorophyll achemistryChlorophyllGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesHyperspectral imagingEnvironmental scienceContext (language use)SatelliteSpectral bandsLeaf area indexHyMapRemote sensingInternational Journal of Remote Sensing
researchProduct

Geostatistics for Mapping Leaf Area Index over a Cropland Landscape: Efficiency Sampling Assessment

2010

This paper evaluates the performance of spatial methods to estimate leaf area index (LAI) fields from ground-based measurements at high-spatial resolution over a cropland landscape. Three geostatistical model variants of the kriging technique, the ordinary kriging (OK), the collocated cokriging (CKC) and kriging with an external drift (KED) are used. The study focused on the influence of the spatial sampling protocol, auxiliary information, and spatial resolution in the estimates. The main advantage of these models lies in the possibility of considering the spatial dependence of the data and, in the case of the KED and CKC, the auxiliary information for each location used for prediction pur…

cropland landscapeleaf area indexScienceQgeostatistics methodsSampling (statistics)GeostatisticsField (geography)KrigingGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesCommon spatial patternSpatial dependenceLeaf area indexVariogramspatial samplingMathematicsRemote sensingRemote Sensing
researchProduct

Considerations about an indicator aimed at describing the energy efficiency of buildings with innovative envelope components at different climatic co…

2020

Green roofs are building components that have become increasingly common in urban contexts because other than the general improvement of the aesthetics of the buildings equipped with them, they have demonstrated to positively improve the building energy performance. Consequently, it would be useful for technicians to have easy and reliable indicators to achieve a synthetic quantitative judgement about the effectiveness of green roofs by an energy perspective compared to others building envelope technologies, for different climates. In sight of the definition of such an indicator, or at least of its properties, some considerations aimed at this purpose, especially concerning the use of new c…

green roofArchitectural engineeringSettore ING-IND/11 - Fisica Tecnica AmbientaleDegree DayComputer scienceLeaf Area Index020209 energycool roofJudgement0211 other engineering and technologiesBuilding energy02 engineering and technologyEnergy consumptionBuilding energy efficiencyclimatic vector021105 building & construction0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringHeating degree dayBuilding envelopeEnvelope (motion)Efficient energy use2020 IEEE International Conference on Environment and Electrical Engineering and 2020 IEEE Industrial and Commercial Power Systems Europe (EEEIC / I&CPS Europe)
researchProduct