Spectrometry of pasture condition and biogeochemistry in the central Amazon
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Geophysical Research Letters
- Vol. 26 (17) , 2769-2772
- https://doi.org/10.1029/1999gl900546
Abstract
Regional analyses of Amazon cattle pasture biogeochemistry are difficult due to the complexity of human, edaphic, biotic and climatic factors and persistent cloud cover in satellite observations. We developed a method to estimate key biophysical properties of Amazon pastures using hyperspectral reflectance data and photon transport inverse modeling. Remote estimates of live and senescent biomass were strongly correlated with plant‐available forms of soil phosphorus and calcium. These results provide a basis for monitoring pasture condition and biogeochemistry in the Amazon Basin using spaceborne hyperspectral sensors.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biophysical and Biochemical Sources of Variability in Canopy ReflectanceRemote Sensing of Environment, 1998
- Fire in the Brazilian Amazon 2. Biomass, nutrient pools and losses in cattle pasturesOecologia, 1998
- Inversion of a vegetation reflectance model with NOAA AVHRR dataRemote Sensing of Environment, 1996
- Soil properties under Amazon forest and changes due to pasture installation in Rondônia, BrazilGeoderma, 1996
- Effects of standing litter on the biophysical interpretation of plant canopies with spectral indicesRemote Sensing of Environment, 1996
- Global net primary production: Combining ecology and remote sensingRemote Sensing of Environment, 1995
- Integrating Amazonian Vegetation, Land-Use, and Satellite DataBioScience, 1994
- Tropical Deforestation and Habitat Fragmentation in the Amazon: Satellite Data from 1978 to 1988Science, 1993
- Radiative transfer in three-dimensional atmosphere-vegetation mediaJournal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 1993
- A review on the theory of photon transport in leaf canopiesAgricultural and Forest Meteorology, 1989