通过整合卫星和气象数据集,绘制西伯利亚 15 年日淹没和植被图,并将其应用于环境领域

IF 3.5 3区 地球科学 Q1 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Hiroki Mizuochi, Taiga Sasagawa, Akihiko Ito, Yoshihiro Iijima, Hotaek Park, Hirohiko Nagano, Kazuhito Ichii, Tetsuya Hiyama
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于气候变化,泛北极地区的气温上升幅度大于地球表面的其他地理区域。这导致陆地生态系统和水文循环发生了巨大变化,影响了植被分布以及水流和积聚模式。各种遥感技术,包括光学和微波卫星观测,都有助于监测这些陆地水和植被动态。本研究利用卫星和再分析数据集绘制了 2003-2017 年期间西伯利亚大陆范围内高时间分辨率(日)和中等空间分辨率(500 米)的水和植被图。通过基于像素的机器学习(随机森林)对多种数据源进行了整合,生成了归一化差异水指数(NDWI)、归一化差异植被指数(NDVI)和水分指数,即使在光学数据缺失的地区(如云层)也没有任何空白。为方便用户处理数据,我们提供了一个汇总产品,其格式为 0.1° 的经纬度投影网格。使用原始光学图像进行验证时,NDWI 和 NDVI 图像显示出较小的系统偏差,研究区域内的均方根误差约为 0.1。该产品既用于 2003 年至 2017 年指数的时间序列趋势分析,也用于基于季节性 NDVI 模式的物候特征提取。前者用于识别 NDVI 下降而 NDWI 上升的区域,以及湖边和沿海地区 NDWI 下降的热点区域。后一项分析采用双sigmoid拟合,评估了两个落叶松林地点的五个物候参数(即春秋季的开始和结束以及NDVI峰值)的变化,突出显示了最近生长期延长的趋势。未来将开发更多应用,包括模型集成和对土地覆被制图的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Creation and environmental applications of 15-year daily inundation and vegetation maps for Siberia by integrating satellite and meteorological datasets

Creation and environmental applications of 15-year daily inundation and vegetation maps for Siberia by integrating satellite and meteorological datasets

As a result of climate change, the pan-Arctic region has seen greater temperature increases than other geographical regions on the Earth’s surface. This has led to substantial changes in terrestrial ecosystems and the hydrological cycle, which have affected the distribution of vegetation and the patterns of water flow and accumulation. Various remote sensing techniques, including optical and microwave satellite observations, are useful for monitoring these terrestrial water and vegetation dynamics. In the present study, satellite and reanalysis datasets were used to produce water and vegetation maps with a high temporal resolution (daily) and moderate spatial resolution (500 m) at a continental scale over Siberia in the period 2003–2017. The multiple data sources were integrated by pixel-based machine learning (random forest), which generated a normalized difference water index (NDWI), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), and water fraction without any gaps, even for areas where optical data were missing (e.g., cloud cover). For the convenience of users handling the data, an aggregated product is provided, formatted using a 0.1° grid in latitude/longitude projection. When validated using the original optical images, the NDWI and NDVI images showed small systematic biases, with a root mean squared error of approximately 0.1 over the study area. The product was used for both time-series trend analysis of the indices from 2003 to 2017 and phenological feature extraction based on seasonal NDVI patterns. The former analysis was used to identify areas where the NDVI is decreasing and the NDWI is increasing, and hotspots where the NDWI at lakesides and coastal regions is decreasing. The latter analysis, which employed double-sigmoid fitting to assess changes in five phenological parameters (i.e., start and end of spring and fall, and peak NDVI values) at two larch forest sites, highlighted a tendency for recent lengthening of the growing period. Further applications, including model integration and contribution to land cover mapping, will be developed in the future.

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来源期刊
Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
Progress in Earth and Planetary Science Earth and Planetary Sciences-General Earth and Planetary Sciences
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.10%
发文量
59
审稿时长
31 weeks
期刊介绍: Progress in Earth and Planetary Science (PEPS), a peer-reviewed open access e-journal, was launched by the Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU) in 2014. This international journal is devoted to high-quality original articles, reviews and papers with full data attached in the research fields of space and planetary sciences, atmospheric and hydrospheric sciences, human geosciences, solid earth sciences, and biogeosciences. PEPS promotes excellent review articles and welcomes articles with electronic attachments including videos, animations, and large original data files. PEPS also encourages papers with full data attached: papers with full data attached are scientific articles that preserve the full detailed raw research data and metadata which were gathered in their preparation and make these data freely available to the research community for further analysis.
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