Estimation of forest leaf area index from SPOT imagery using NDVI distribution over forest stands

Leaf area index (LAI) is a key parameter of atmosphere–vegetation exchanges, affecting the net ecosystem exchange and the productivity. At regional or continental scales, LAI can be estimated by remotely‐sensed spectral vegetation indices (SVI). Nevertheless, relationships between LAI and SVI show saturation for LAI values greater than 3–5. This is one of the principal limitations of remote sensing of LAI in forest canopies. In this article, a new approach is developed to determine LAI from the spatial variability of radiometric data. To test this method, in situ measurements for LAI of 40 stands, with three dominant species (European beech, oak and Scots pine) were available over 5 years in the Fontainebleau forest near Paris. If all years and all species are pooled, a good linear relationship without saturation is founded between average stand LAI measurements and a model combining the logarithm of the standard deviation and the skewness of the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) (R 2 = 0.73 rmse = 1.08). We demonstrate that this relation can be slightly improved by using different linear models for each year and each species (R 2 = 0.82 rmse = 0.86), but the standard deviation is less sensitive to the species and the year effects than the mean NDVI and is therefore a performing index.

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