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Comparative Quality and Trend of Remotely Sensed Phenology and Productivity Metrics across the Western United States

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Ethan E Berman, Tabitha A Graves, Nathaniel L Mikle, Jerod A. Merkle, Aaron N Johnston, and Geneva W Chong, 2020-08-07, Comparative Quality and Trend of Remotely Sensed Phenology and Productivity Metrics across the Western United States: Remote Sens, v. 12, iss. 2538.

Summary

Vegetation phenology and productivity play a crucial role in surface energy balance, plant and animal distribution, and animal movement and habitat use and can be measured with remote sensing metrics including start of season (SOS), peak instantaneous rate of green-up date (PIRGd), peak of season (POS), end of season (EOS), and integrated vegetation indices. However, for most metrics, we do not yet understand the agreement of remotely sensed data products with near-surface observations. We also need summaries of changes over time, spatial distribution, variability, and consistency in remote sensing dataset metrics for vegetation timing and quality. We compare metrics from 10 leading remote sensing datasets against a network of PhenoCam [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • North Central CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalRemote Sens
parts
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.3390/rs12162538
typeVolume
value12
typeIssue
value2538

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