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Remote sensing of native and invasive species in Hawaiian forests

机译:遥感夏威夷森林中的本地和入侵物种

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Detection and mapping of invasive species is an important component of conservation and management efforts in Hawai'i, but the spectral separability of native, introduced, and invasive species has not been established. We used high spatial resolution airborne imaging spectroscopy to analyze the canopy hyperspectral reflectance properties of 37 distinct species or phenotypes, 7 common native and 24 introduced tree species, the latter group containing 12 highly invasive species. Airborne Visible and Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) reflectance and derivative-reflectance signatures of Hawaiian native trees were generically unique from those of introduced trees. Nitrogen-fixing trees were also spectrally unique from other groups of non-fixing trees. There were subtle but significant differences in the spectral properties of highly invasive tree species in comparison to introduced species that do not proliferate across Hawaiian ecosystems. The observed differences in canopy spectral signatures were linked to relative differences in measured leaf pigment (chlorophyll, carotenoids), nutrient (N, P), and structural (specific leaf area; SLA) properties, as well as to canopy leaf area index. These leaf and canopy properties contributed variably to the spectral separability of the trees, with wavelength-specific reflectance and absorption features that overlapped, but which were unique from one another. A combination of canopy reflectance from 1125-2500 nm associated with leaf and canopy water content, along with pigment-related absorption features (reflectance derivatives) in the 400-700 nm range, was best for delineating native, introduced, and invasive species. There was no single spectral region that always defined the separability of the species groups, and thus the full-range (400-2500 nm) spectrum was highly advantageous in differentiating these groups. These results provide a basis for more detailed studies of invasive species in Hawai'i, along with more explicit treatment of the biochemical properties of the canopies and their prediction using imaging spectroscopy. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
机译:入侵物种的检测和制图是夏威夷保护和管理工作的重要组成部分,但尚未确定本地,引进和入侵物种的光谱可分离性。我们使用高空间分辨率的机载成像光谱法分析了37个不同物种或表型,7种常见原生树种和24种引进树种的树冠高光谱反射特性,后一组包含12种高侵入性树种。夏威夷本地树木的机载可见光和红外成像光谱仪(AVIRIS)的反射率和导数反射签名与引入的树木相比通常具有独特性。固氮树在光谱上也不同于其他非固氮树。与未在夏威夷生态系统中扩散的引入物种相比,高侵入性树种的光谱特性存在细微但显着的差异。冠层光谱特征的观察到的差异与测得的叶片色素(叶绿素,类胡萝卜素),养分(N,P)和结构(比叶面积; SLA)特性的相对差异以及冠层叶面积指数有关。这些叶片和冠层特性对树木的光谱可分离性做出了不同的贡献,具有特定波长的反射率和吸收率重叠,但彼此之间是唯一的。从1125-2500 nm的冠层反射率与叶片和冠层含水量相关联,以及400-700 nm范围内与色素有关的吸收特征(反射率衍生物)的组合最适合于描述原生物种,引入物种和入侵物种。没有一个单一的光谱区域总是定义这些物种组的可分离性,因此全光谱(400-2500 nm)光谱在区分这些物种方面非常有利。这些结果为对夏威夷的入侵物种进行更详细的研究,以及对冠层的生化特性进行更明确的处理以及使用成像光谱对其进行预测提供了基础。 (C)2008 Elsevier Inc.保留所有权利。

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