Toward 30 m Fine-Resolution Land Surface Phenology Mapping at a Large Scale Using Spatiotemporal Fusion of MODIS and Landsat Data

Satellite-retrieved land surface phenology (LSP) is a first-order control on terrestrial ecosystem productivity, which is critical for monitoring the ecological environment and human and social sustainable development. However, mapping large-scale LSP at a 30 m resolution remains challenging due to...

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Published inSustainability Vol. 15; no. 4; p. 3365
Main Authors Ruan, Yongjian, Ruan, Baozhen, Zhang, Xinchang, Ao, Zurui, Xin, Qinchuan, Sun, Ying, Jing, Fengrui
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.02.2023
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Summary:Satellite-retrieved land surface phenology (LSP) is a first-order control on terrestrial ecosystem productivity, which is critical for monitoring the ecological environment and human and social sustainable development. However, mapping large-scale LSP at a 30 m resolution remains challenging due to the lack of dense time series images with a fine resolution and the difficulty in processing large volumes of data. In this paper, we proposed a framework to extract fine-resolution LSP across the conterminous United States using the supercomputer Tianhe-2. The proposed framework comprised two steps: (1) generation of the dense two-band enhanced vegetation index (EVI2) time series with a fine resolution via the spatiotemporal fusion of MODIS and Landsat images using ESTARFM, and (2) extraction of the long-term and fine-resolution LSP using the fused EVI2 dataset. We obtained six methods (i.e., AT, FOD, SOD, RCR, TOD and CCR) of fine-resolution LSP with the proposed framework, and evaluated its performance at both the site and regional scales. Comparing with PhenoCam-observed phenology, the start of season (SOS) derived from the fusion data using six methods of AT, FOD, SOD, RCR, TOD and CCR obtained r values of 0.43, 0.44, 0.41, 0.29, 0.46 and 0.52, respectively, and RMSE values of 30.9, 28.9, 32.2, 37.9, 37.8 and 33.2, respectively. The satellite-retrieved end of season (EOS) using six methods of AT, FOD, SOD, RCR, TOD and CCR obtained r values of 0.68, 0.58, 0.68, 0.73, 0.65 and 0.56, respectively, and RMSE values of 51.1, 53.6, 50.5, 44.9, 51.8 and 54.6, respectively. Comparing with the MCD12Q2 phenology, the satellite-retrieved 30 m fine-resolution LSP of the proposed framework can obtain more information on the land surface, such as rivers, ridges and valleys, which is valuable for phenology-related studies. The proposed framework can yield robust fine-resolution LSP at a large-scale, and the results have great potential for application into studies addressing problems in the ecological environmental at a large scale.
ISSN:2071-1050
2071-1050
DOI:10.3390/su15043365