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COMPARISON OF THREE REMOTE SENSING METHODS TO PREDICT ABOVE GROUND PLANT BIOMASS PRODUCTION
Author
Tucker Porter
Chengci Chen
Rick Lawrence
Bok Sowell
Publication Year
2013
Body

Direct harvesting is currently the most widely used method in determining above ground plant biomass production. This method, however, is costly, time consuming, destructive and only allows individual samples to be measured accurately out of a potentially highly variable sward. Therefore, a quick, accurate, and non-destructive method is needed to estimate the amount of above ground plant biomass in a pasture or across a landscape. Remote sensing of vegetation spectral responses, which tend to be highly responsive to changes in biomass, promises to provide a means for frequent, non?destructive measurements of above ground plant biomass at management relevant scales. The objective of this study was to compare different remote sensing techniques to determine which is the most accurate in predicting above ground plant biomass production. Above ground plant biomass production predicted by the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) measurements collected by a ground based sensor and both NDVI and other band combination measurements collected by satellite based imagery were compared.

Language
eng
Additional Information
Tucker Porter1, Chengci Chen2, Rick Lawrence3, Bok Sowell1 --- 1Department of Animal and Range Sciences, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA, 2Central Agricultural Research Center, Montana State University, Moccasin, Montana, USA, 3Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA
Collection
SRM Annual Meeting Abstracts