Monitoring grass nutrients and biomass as indicators of rangeland quality and quantity using random forest modelling and WorldView-2 data
Abel Ramoelo,
Moses Azong Cho,
Renaud Mathieu,
S. Madonsela,
Ruben Van De Kerchove,
Zaneta Kaszta and
Eléonore Wolff
ULB Institutional Repository from ULB -- Universite Libre de Bruxelles
Abstract:
Land use and climate change could have huge impacts on food security and the health of various ecosystems. Leaf nitrogen (N) and above-ground biomass are some of the key factors limiting agricultural production and ecosystem functioning. Leaf N and biomass can be used as indicators of rangeland quality and quantity. Conventional methods for assessing these vegetation parameters at landscape scale level are time consuming and tedious. Remote sensing provides a bird-eye view of the landscape, which creates an opportunity to assess these vegetation parameters over wider rangeland areas. Estimation of leaf N has been successful during peak productivity or high biomass and limited studies estimated leaf N in dry season. The estimation of above-ground biomass has been hindered by the signal saturation problems using conventional vegetation indices. The objective of this study is to monitor leaf N and above-ground biomass as an indicator of rangeland quality and quantity using WorldView-2 satellite images and random forest technique in the north-eastern part of South Africa. Series of field work to collect samples for leaf N and biomass were undertaken in March 2013, April or May 2012 (end of wet season) and July 2012 (dry season). Several conventional and red edge based vegetation indices were computed. Overall results indicate that random forest and vegetation indices explained over 89% of leaf N concentrations for grass and trees, and less than 89% for all the years of assessment. The red edge based vegetation indices were among the important variables for predicting leaf N. For the biomass, random forest model explained over 84% of biomass variation in all years, and visible bands including red edge based vegetation indices were found to be important. The study demonstrated that leaf N could be monitored using high spatial resolution with the red edge band capability, and is important for rangeland assessment and monitoring.
Keywords: Biomass; Leaf nitrogen; Random forest model; Rangeland quality; Red edge band; WorldView-2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr and nep-env
Note: SCOPUS: ar.j
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Published in: International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation (2015) v.43,p.43-54
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ulb:ulbeco:2013/226509
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