Developing simple, operational, consistent NDVI-vegetation models by applying environmental and climatic information: Part I. Assessment of net primary production
Multiple linear regression techniques have been used to assess rangeland Net Primary Production (NPP) in Senegal. The biophysical principles of assessing NPP as a function of the Absorbed Photosynthetic Active Radiation (APAR) accumulated during the growing season, multiplied by the efficient coefficient (epsilon), have been used for the work. Accumulated APAR can be substituted with the seasonal integration of NDVI multiplied by the Photosynthetic Active Radiation (PAR). However, a linear regression showed that the NDVI alone was a better and more consistent estimator of rangeland NPP compared with the use of NDVI combined with the PAR data. A first characterization of environmental and climatic variability was attempted. Soil and vegetation information was used and GIS interpolation tools were exploited to create spatial surfaces of environmental and climatic variables from point observations. A multiple linear regression with the independent variables: integrated NDVI, percentage tree cover and mean surface temperature, improved significantly the level of explained NPP (from 71 to 82 per cent). This model was valid for two years of data.
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date: 10 January 1998
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