1 / 61

A Workshop on Land Surface Phenology

A Workshop on Land Surface Phenology. Presented by Kirsten de Beurs, Ph.D. Department of Geography Virginia Tech University & Geoffrey M. Henebry, Ph.D., C.S.E. Geographic Information Science Center of Excellence South Dakota State University.

Download Presentation

A Workshop on Land Surface Phenology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Workshop on Land Surface Phenology Presented by Kirsten de Beurs, Ph.D. Department of Geography Virginia Tech University & Geoffrey M. Henebry, Ph.D., C.S.E. Geographic Information Science Center of Excellence South Dakota State University This workshop is sponsored in part by the USA National Phenology Network and the NSF USA-NPN Research Coordination Network (Grant #0639794).

  2. GIScCE Lecture 1: Introduction to Land Surface Phenology Geoffrey M. Henebry, Ph.D., C.S.E. Professor of Biology & Geography and Senior Research Scientist Geographic Information Science Center of Excellence (GIScCE) South Dakota State University Geoffrey.Henebry@sdstate.edu http://globalmonitoring.sdstate.edu Madison LSP Workshop: 08 APR 2008

  3. Outline of Talk • Contexts for Land Surface Phenology (28) • A. What is Phenology? (16) • B. What are Objects of Phenological Interest? (3) • C. What are Methods of Phenological Observation? (5) • D. What are Methods of Phenological Analysis? (4) • Remote Sensing Basics (9) • The Planetary Macroscope (3) • Radiation Basics (3) • Seeing “Green” from Space (3) • A Driver of Phenology(18) • Whose Time? (2) • Réaumur & Thermal Times (6) • Example from Konza Prairie LTER: Insolation, AGDD, ANPP (9) • Concluding Remarks (3)

  4. GIScCE What is phenology ?

  5. GIScCE Theophrastus on Plant Phenology (372-288 B.C.) Instead every plant must possess a certain adjustment to the season, since the season turns out to be more responsible [for sprouting] than anything else. For all are seen to await their own appropriate season, meanwhile not sprouting at all and not be set in motion, trees and woody and herbaceous plants alike; for the fact is plainest in wild plants, where generation is the plant’s own doing and not promoted by man. De Causis Plantarum, Book 1, 10.5-10.6

  6. GIScCE Phenology may be defined as the science of investigating the influence of meteorological conditions on the recurrence of the annual phenomena of animal and plant life, such as, for example, the dates of appearance of blossoms or insects. H.C. Gunton, 1938 Source: Gunton, H.C. 1938. Nature Study Above and Below the Surface: A Bridge between Amateur and Professional. London: H.F.& G. Witherby., LTD. 134pp.

  7. GIScCE Phenology may be defined as the science of investigating the influence of meteorologicalconditions on the recurrence of the annualphenomena of animal and plant life, such as, for example, the dates of appearance of blossoms or insects. H.C. Gunton, 1938 Source: Gunton, H.C. 1938. Nature Study Above and Below the Surface: A Bridge between Amateur and Professional. London: H.F.& G. Witherby., LTD. 134pp.

  8. GIScCE Phenology, which derived from the Greek word fainw meaning to show or to appear, is the study of periodic biological events in the animal and plant world as influenced by the environment, especially temperature changes driven by weather and climate. M.D. Schwartz, 2003 Source: Schwartz, M.D. 2003. Introduction. In: (M.D. Schwartz, ed.) Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. 564pp.

  9. GIScCE Phenology, which derived from the Greek word fainw meaning to show or to appear, is the study of periodic biological events in the animal and plant world as influenced by the environment, especially temperature changes driven by weather and climate. M.D. Schwartz, 2003 Source: Schwartz, M.D. 2003. Introduction. In: (M.D. Schwartz, ed.) Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. 564pp.

  10. GIScCE Phenology has been defined as the study of the timing of recurring biological events, the causes of their timing, their relationship to biotic and abiotic forces, and the inter-relations among phases of the same or different species. J.Y. Ewusie, 1992 Source: Ewusie, J.Y. 1992. Phenology in Tropical Ecology. Accra: Ghana Universities Press. 109 pp.

  11. GIScCE Phenology has been defined as the study of the timing of recurring biological events, the causes of their timing, their relationship to biotic and abiotic forces, and the inter-relations among phases of the same or different species. J.Y. Ewusie, 1992 Source: Ewusie, J.Y. 1992. Phenology in Tropical Ecology. Accra: Ghana Universities Press. 109 pp.

  12. GIScCE • KEY POINTS • Phenology… • Studies temporal patterns of biological events • Focuses on specific organisms • Seeks to understand the influences on or causes of timing of these events due to: • abiotic forces • biotic forces • intraspecific interactions • interspecific interactions

  13. GIScCE • CAVEATS • Phenology is not… • restricted to annual phenomena • restricted to the extratropics • restricted to temperature effects • restricted to vernal emergence, the “onset of spring”

  14. GIScCE Seasonality is a related term, referring to similar non-biological events, such as timing of the fall formation and spring break-up of ice on fresh water lakes. M.D. Schwartz, 2003 Source: Schwartz, M.D. 2003. Introduction. In: (M.D. Schwartz, ed.) Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. 564pp.

  15. GIScCE • Some Useful Distinctions & Categories • Phenology is distinct from seasonality: biotic vs. abiotic temporal patterns. But seasonality can affect phenology and vice versa. • Land surface phenology is distinct from phenology: observing electomagnetic radiation at coarse spatial resolution results in a mixture of signals that combines biotic and abiotic components.

  16. GIScCE • Some Useful Distinctions & Categories • Land surface phenologies (LSPs) are the seasonalspatio-temporal patterns of the vegetated land surface [as observed by synoptic sensors at spatial resolutions and extents relevant to meteorological processes in the atmospheric boundary layer]. • LSPs affect the timing and magnitude of energy and water exchanges between the land surface and the boundary layer.

  17. GIScCE • Key surface types for LSPs: • Ever-green • Spring-green • Rain-green • Never-green

  18. GIScCE SD • Differential • Land Surface Phenology due to Land Use • MODIS NDVI • @ 1km in 2004 • R = 08MAY • G = 27JUL • B = 08MAR NE KS

  19. GIScCE Land Surface Phenology: AVHRR WDRVI 2000 R=Jun02-Jun15, G=Jul14-Jul27, B=Mar10-Mar23

  20. GIScCE What are objects of phenological interest?

  21. GIScCE Question: What is Spring?— Growth in everything— Flesh and fleece, fur and feather, Grass and greenworld all together From The May Magnificat By Gerard Manley Hopkins

  22. GIScCE • Species Arrivals & Departures (Appearances & Disappearances) • Species Growth & Development • Species Abundance • Temporal Sequence of Species Interactions, e.g., pollination, seed dispersal. • Temporal Sequence of Population Interactions, e.g., reproductive behavior, mating rites. • Unusual Events, e.g., very early or very late events, disturbance and recovery, invasive species, meteorological extremes. • Others?

  23. GIScCE What are methods of phenological observation?

  24. GIScCE • Surveys along routes or transects • Periodic observations in permanent plots • Manipulative experiments with phenological response variables • Citizen science (e.g., GLOBE; NatureMapping) • Remote and proximal sensing • Harvesting of past observations from older articles, monographs, gray literature documents, and theses/dissertations and digitizing them for contemporary analyses. • Others?

  25. GIScCE The Significance of the Observer in Phenology • As implied in the roots of the word, appearance is a critical aspect of phenological investigations, but appearance to whom? • Survey or sampling design is one key to capturing ephemeral and/or spatially variable phenomena. • Another critical key is training of observers. Phenological items may involve visual or auditory cues. Recognition and correct identification of these cues may require substantial training or prior experience. • Error among observers is rarely quantified.

  26. GIScCE • Characteristics of a “good” phenological item pt 1 • low labor cost/simple to observe • sharp/distinct to minimize error among observers • issue of binomial vs. multinomial vs. ordinalscale • common/abundant • high degree of accessibility (visibility or audibility) Source: Leopold, A., and S.E. Jones. 1947. A phenological record for Sauk and Dane Counties, Wisconsin, 1935-1945. Ecological Monographs 17(1):81-122.

  27. GIScCE • Characteristics of a “good” phenological item pt 2 • reliability of recurrence • continuity • evidence of newness • locally-determined dynamics • sufficient prior knowledge to identify the unusual • what else? Source: Leopold, A., and S.E. Jones. 1947. A phenological record for Sauk and Dane Counties, Wisconsin, 1935-1945. Ecological Monographs 17(1):81-122.

  28. GIScCE What are methods of phenological analysis?

  29. GIScCE • Database Querying • Graphical Analysis • Association Rules • Exploratory Data Analysis/Data Mining • Statistical Models • Physiologically-based Models of Development • Simulation Models • Interpretative Gestalt • Others?

  30. GIScCE Phenology, in short, is a “horizontal science” which transects all ordinary biological professions. Whoever sees the land as a whole is likely to have an interest in it. A. Leopold & S.E. Jones, 1947 Source: Leopold, A., and S.E. Jones. 1947. A phenological record for Sauk and Dane Counties, Wisconsin, 1935-1945. Ecological Monographs 17(1):81-122.

  31. Grasslands phenology emerges from the interactivity of multiple influences source: Henebry, G.M. 2003. Grasslands of the North American Great Plains. In: Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science (M.D. Schwartz, editor). Kluwer, New York. pp. 157-174. as filtered through the specifics of spatial relationships, genetic heritage, and the process of observation.

  32. Using the planetary macroscope • Learning to see again at different scales. • Scale describes the resolution (grain) and extent of measurements and the relationship between the thing observed and its measurement. • Spatial scales • Temporal scales • Spectral scales • Radiometric scales • Resisting the naïve interpretations that our evolved visual cognition system provides. Just as telescopes are “light buckets” gatheringstarlightand integrating it over extended periods, the constellation of earth-observing sensors gathers and integrates thesunlightandearthlightarising from the planetary surface.

  33. Remote sensing samples just tiny fractions of reflected solar & emitted terrestrial radiation

  34. GIScCE Illumination Passive Sensing Sensor Shortwave: reflected sunlight Longwave: emitted earthlight Target

  35. GIScCE Any matter with a temperature greater than absolute zero emits electromagnetic radiation. How to determine what are the characteristics of that emission? Use the convenient fiction of the “blackbody”  a perfect absorber is also a perfect emitter.

  36. Half-a-Nickel Course in Radiation Laws • Planck’s Law : Upper bound on the intensity of the radiation emitted by a blackbody: • Bl(T) dl = ( 2 h c2 ) / [ l5 ( e hc / k l T -1) ] dl • where • l is wavelength • T is temperature in K • h is Planck’s constant  6.626 x 10-34 J s • C is the speed of light in a vacuum  2.998 x 108 m s-1 • k is Boltzmann’s constant  1.381 x 10-23 J K-1 • Resulting units: W m-2mm-1 sr-1  Power per unit area per unit solid angle per unit wavelength Intensity of emission contributed by the wavelength interval [l, l+dl] varies by the inverse fifth power. Hotter things emit shorter l.

  37. Half-a-Nickel Course in Radiation Laws • Wien’s Displacement Law: For a given absolute temperature, Planck’s Law has a single peak at a wavelength that is inversely proportional to that temperature: • lmax x T = A or lmax = A/ T • where • l is wavelength • T is temperature in K • A is a constant  2897 mm K

  38. Atmospheric opacity across the electromagnetic spectrum Source: Wikipedia

  39. Spectra collected in the Nebraska Sandhills, June 2004 Green Blue Near infrared Red

  40. Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) exploits the spectral contrast between NIR and red reflectance displayed by (most) terrestrial vegetation. NDVI = (rNIR – rred) / (rNIR + rred) NDVI gives some indication of the density of absorbers of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR  400-700 nm) at the surface. However, mapping NDVI into leaf area index (LAI) or aboveground net primary production (ANPP) is fraught with caveats and uncertainties. Nevertheless, it provides an important window into the dynamics of the vegetated land surface. GIScCE

  41. GIScCE Drivers of Phenology

  42. GIScCE Whose time? If phenology attends to the timing of recurrent biological events, then whose “clock” and “calendar” should track that time? Calendars are anthropocentric. Do the plants pay attention to our calendars? Can we link vegetation dynamics to a bioclimatological calendar?

  43. GIScCE Heat-sum or degree-day methods are simple and quite old, but have a theoretical foundation in the kinetics of biochemical reactions. Source: Charles-Edwards, D.A., D. Doley, G. Rimmington. 1986. Modelling Plant Growth and Development. Sydney: Academic Press Australia. 235pp.

  44. GIScCE René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur(February 28, 1683 - October 17, 1757) In 1731 he became interested in meteorology, and invented the thermometer scale which bears his name: the Réaumur. The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Réaumur, the boiling point 80 degrees Réaumur. Hence, a Reaumur degree is 1.25 Celsius degrees or Kelvins. Réaumur may have chosen the octogesimal division because the number 80 could be halved 4 times and still be an integer (40, 20, 10, 5); the number 100, for instance, could only suffer this process twice (50, 25). Source: Wikipedia

  45. GIScCE Réaumur “adopted simply the sum of the mean daily temperature of the air as recorded by a thermometer in the shade, and counting from any given physiological epoch to any other epoch.” Abbe, Cleveland. 1905. A First Report on the Relations Between Climates and Crops. Bulletin 36. Weather Bureau, No. 342. USDA. Source: van Keulen, H. 1987. Forecasting and estimating effects of weather on yield. In: (K. Wisiol and J.D. Hesketh, eds.) Plant Growth Modeling for Resource Management: Volume 1 Current Models and Methods. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. Pp 105-124.

  46. GIScCE “The true problem for the climatologist to settle during the present century is not whether the climate has lately changed, but what our present climate is, what its well-defined features are, and how they can be most clearly expressed in numbers.” […] “It will be seen that rational climatology gives no basis for the much-talked-of influence upon the climate of a country produced by the growth or destruction of forests, the building of railroads or telegraphs, and the cultivation of crops over a wide extent of prairie.” Cleveland Abbe, Is our climate changing?, Forum, 6, pp 687-688, 1889 Source: http://www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/clfor/cfstaff/nnn/nnn_climate_quotes.htm The American Meteorological Society has an annual award: The Cleveland Abbe Award For Distinguished Service To Atmospheric Sciences By An Individual More on Professor Abbe here:http://www.history.noaa.gov/nwsbios/abbe.html

  47. GIScCE In phenological studies, it is sometimes convenient to summarize recent weather into measures that can relate to plant growth and development. Accumulated Growing Degree-Days (also known as thermal time) is a simple biometeorological variable that weights the passage of days by the quantity of “growing degrees” – that portion of the diel temperature range that is useful for plant growth, broadly construed. The calculation of AGDD is straightforward. The average temperature for a given day is calculated as the simple mean of the maximum and minimum temperatures observed that day. From this average, a “base temperature” is subtracted and values summed: AGDDt = AGDDt-1 + max[(AverageTempt - Base),0]

  48. GIScCE The magnitude of the base depends on the type of organism under consideration. I have found that for perennial grasslands a base of 0 oC is very effective. Crop models often use a base of 4 oC for cool season crops (e.g., winter wheat) and 10 oC for warm season crops (e.g., maize). In the northern hemisphere the convention is to start accumulating at the beginning of the year, with each 01JAN resetting the accumulation. (Is that appropriate?) While this approach is handy for temperate and boreal systems, it is not very useful in tropical or arid systems in which phenological timing is associated with available moisture, internal carbohydrate pools, co-evolved relationships, or other non-thermal triggers.

  49. GIScCE Temperature serves a surrogate for insolation, but it is also very important itself for regulating rates of enzyme systems. Thus, temperature is a “mixed signal” and its use is further complicated by the fact that as variable it is intensive rather than extensive. Extensive measurements scale with change of dimension. Intensive measurements don’t. Examples: (1) the temperature of this room vs the mass of air in the room; (2) your body temperature vs your body weight.

  50. GIScCE

More Related