Publications

Petri, CA; Galvao, LS; de Aragao, LEOEC; Dalagnol, R; de Almeida, CT; Oliveira, AHM; Felix, IM (2022). Solar illumination effects on the dry-season variability of spectral and spatial attributes calculated from PlanetScope data over tropical forests of the Amazon. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING, 43(11), 4087-4116.

Abstract
The spectral variability of tropical forests during the Amazonian dry season is not entirely understood because of the divergent responses in Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) vegetation indices (VIs) measured under-increased water deficit and high insolation. Here, we used a dataset composed of 493 cloud-free PlanetScope (PS) images to investigate possible effects of solar illumination on the dry-season variability of spectral and spatial attributes. The attributes were calculated from June to September over dense tropical forests of the Amazon. The dry-season images were obtained at nadir viewing between 2017 and 2019 over 12 selected sites representing different climatic and environmental conditions. To detect dry-season patterns of vegetation brightness with changes in the geometry of image acquisition, we applied principal component analysis (PCA) over the PS surface reflectance. We plotted the average surface reflectance (2017-2019) for each of the four PS bands and inspected the variability of two VIs with distinct levels of anisotropy to bidirectional effects: the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) and the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). We also investigated the signal of textural metrics from Grey Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM) obtained from the near-infrared (NIR) band of PS. Finally, we generated shade fractions from Spectral Mixture Analysis (SMA), correlated the spectral and spatial attributes of vegetation with solar angles, and observed the dry-season variability in reflectance and VIs over pseudo-invariant soil surfaces. The results showed the existence of solar illumination effects on PS image acquisition during the dry season of the Amazon, which affected differently the NDVI and EVI. From the beginning (June) to the end (September) of the dry season, the solar zenith angle (SZA) decreased and the solar azimuth angle (SAA) increased during the period of acquisition of the PS images. The amplitude of SZA between June and September increased towards south of the Amazon, while the amplitude of SAA increased towards north of this region. Changes in vegetation brightness from June to September were captured by PCA over some sites. Because of the overall increase in both red and NIR band reflectance, solar illumination effects were compensated during the NDVI calculation. In contrast, because the EVI is largely driven by changes in NIR reflectance, these effects contributed to increase the EVI signal at the end of the dry season. For most sites, GLCM texture mean increased towards the end of the dry season, while texture variance decreased in the opposite direction. Shade fractions decreased towards September when reduced amounts of canopy shadows were sensed by PS. EVI was more anisotropic than NDVI and presented higher negative correlations with SZA and shade fractions and higher positive correlations with SAA and texture mean. The dry-season increase in EVI with solar illumination effects was also observed over pseudo-invariant soil surfaces. From this unprecedent scale of observations at high spatial and temporal resolutions, we recommend caution when using anisotropic VIs for large-scale phenological studies over the Amazon because biophysical and non-biophysical signals may be coupled together.

DOI:
10.1080/01431161.2022.2106801

ISSN:
1366-5901