Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy

The spectral reflectance of crop canopy is a spectral mixture, which includes soil background as one of the components. However, as soil is characterized by substantial spatial variability and temporal dynamics, its contribution to the spectral reflectance of crops will also vary. The aim of the res...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elena Prudnikova, Igor Savin, Gretelerika Vindeker, Praskovia Grubina, Ekaterina Shishkonakova, David Sharychev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/16/1932
_version_ 1819291307543101440
author Elena Prudnikova
Igor Savin
Gretelerika Vindeker
Praskovia Grubina
Ekaterina Shishkonakova
David Sharychev
author_facet Elena Prudnikova
Igor Savin
Gretelerika Vindeker
Praskovia Grubina
Ekaterina Shishkonakova
David Sharychev
author_sort Elena Prudnikova
collection DOAJ
description The spectral reflectance of crop canopy is a spectral mixture, which includes soil background as one of the components. However, as soil is characterized by substantial spatial variability and temporal dynamics, its contribution to the spectral reflectance of crops will also vary. The aim of the research was to determine the impact of soil background on spectral reflectance of crop canopy in visible and near-infrared parts of the spectrum at different stages of crop development and how the soil type factor and the dynamics of soil surface affect vegetation indices calculated for crop assessment. The study was conducted on three test plots with winter wheat located in the Tula region of Russia and occupied by three contrasting types of soil. During field trips, information was collected on the spectral reflectance of winter wheat crop canopy, winter wheat leaves, weeds and open soil surface for three phenological phases (tillering, shooting stage, milky ripeness). The assessment of the soil contribution to the spectral reflectance of winter wheat crop canopy was based on a linear spectral mixture model constructed from field data. This showed that the soil background effect is most pronounced in the regions of 350−500 nm and 620−690 nm. In the shooting stage, the contribution of the soil prevails in the 620−690 nm range of the spectrum and the phase of milky ripeness in the region of 350−500 nm. The minimum contribution at all stages of winter wheat development was observed at wavelengths longer than 750 nm. The degree of soil influence varies with soil type. Analysis of variance showed that normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) was least affected by soil type factor, the influence of which was about 30%−50%, depending on the stage of winter wheat development. The influence of soil type on soil-adjusted vegetation index (SAVI) and enhanced vegetation index (EVI2) was approximately equal and varied from 60% (shooting phase) to 80% (tillering phase). According to the discriminant analysis, the ability of vegetation indices calculated for winter wheat crop canopy to distinguish between winter wheat crops growing on different soil types changed from the classification accuracy of 94.1% (EVI2) in the tillering stage to 75% (EVI2 and SAVI) in the shooting stage to 82.6% in the milky ripeness stage (EVI2, SAVI, NDVI). The range of the sensitivity of the vegetation indices to the soil background depended on soil type. The indices showed the greatest sensitivity on gray forest soil when the wheat was in the phase of milky ripeness, and on leached chernozem when the wheat was in the tillering phase. The observed patterns can be used to develop vegetation indices, invariant to second-type soil variations caused by soil type factor, which can be applied for the remote assessment of the state of winter wheat crops.
first_indexed 2024-12-24T03:36:34Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5a62b0cb7c02435b8f6ed2906687e52e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2072-4292
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-24T03:36:34Z
publishDate 2019-08-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Remote Sensing
spelling doaj.art-5a62b0cb7c02435b8f6ed2906687e52e2022-12-21T17:17:02ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922019-08-011116193210.3390/rs11161932rs11161932Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop CanopyElena Prudnikova0Igor Savin1Gretelerika Vindeker2Praskovia Grubina3Ekaterina Shishkonakova4David Sharychev5V. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaV. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaV. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaV. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaV. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaV. V. Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute, Moscow 119017, RussiaThe spectral reflectance of crop canopy is a spectral mixture, which includes soil background as one of the components. However, as soil is characterized by substantial spatial variability and temporal dynamics, its contribution to the spectral reflectance of crops will also vary. The aim of the research was to determine the impact of soil background on spectral reflectance of crop canopy in visible and near-infrared parts of the spectrum at different stages of crop development and how the soil type factor and the dynamics of soil surface affect vegetation indices calculated for crop assessment. The study was conducted on three test plots with winter wheat located in the Tula region of Russia and occupied by three contrasting types of soil. During field trips, information was collected on the spectral reflectance of winter wheat crop canopy, winter wheat leaves, weeds and open soil surface for three phenological phases (tillering, shooting stage, milky ripeness). The assessment of the soil contribution to the spectral reflectance of winter wheat crop canopy was based on a linear spectral mixture model constructed from field data. This showed that the soil background effect is most pronounced in the regions of 350−500 nm and 620−690 nm. In the shooting stage, the contribution of the soil prevails in the 620−690 nm range of the spectrum and the phase of milky ripeness in the region of 350−500 nm. The minimum contribution at all stages of winter wheat development was observed at wavelengths longer than 750 nm. The degree of soil influence varies with soil type. Analysis of variance showed that normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) was least affected by soil type factor, the influence of which was about 30%−50%, depending on the stage of winter wheat development. The influence of soil type on soil-adjusted vegetation index (SAVI) and enhanced vegetation index (EVI2) was approximately equal and varied from 60% (shooting phase) to 80% (tillering phase). According to the discriminant analysis, the ability of vegetation indices calculated for winter wheat crop canopy to distinguish between winter wheat crops growing on different soil types changed from the classification accuracy of 94.1% (EVI2) in the tillering stage to 75% (EVI2 and SAVI) in the shooting stage to 82.6% in the milky ripeness stage (EVI2, SAVI, NDVI). The range of the sensitivity of the vegetation indices to the soil background depended on soil type. The indices showed the greatest sensitivity on gray forest soil when the wheat was in the phase of milky ripeness, and on leached chernozem when the wheat was in the tillering phase. The observed patterns can be used to develop vegetation indices, invariant to second-type soil variations caused by soil type factor, which can be applied for the remote assessment of the state of winter wheat crops.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/16/1932spectral reflectancetriticum aestivumarable soilswinter wheatNDVIEVI2SAVI
spellingShingle Elena Prudnikova
Igor Savin
Gretelerika Vindeker
Praskovia Grubina
Ekaterina Shishkonakova
David Sharychev
Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
Remote Sensing
spectral reflectance
triticum aestivum
arable soils
winter wheat
NDVI
EVI2
SAVI
title Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
title_full Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
title_fullStr Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
title_short Influence of Soil Background on Spectral Reflectance of Winter Wheat Crop Canopy
title_sort influence of soil background on spectral reflectance of winter wheat crop canopy
topic spectral reflectance
triticum aestivum
arable soils
winter wheat
NDVI
EVI2
SAVI
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/16/1932
work_keys_str_mv AT elenaprudnikova influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy
AT igorsavin influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy
AT gretelerikavindeker influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy
AT praskoviagrubina influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy
AT ekaterinashishkonakova influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy
AT davidsharychev influenceofsoilbackgroundonspectralreflectanceofwinterwheatcropcanopy