A comparison between support vector machine and water cloud model for estimating crop leaf area index

Thumbnail image

Download files

DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13071348

Language of the publication
English
Date
2021-04-01
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Hosseini, Mehdi
  • McNairn, Heather
  • Mitchell, Scott
  • Robertson, Laura Dingle
  • Davidson, Andrew
  • Ahmadian, Nima
  • Bhattacharya, Avik
  • Borg, Erik
  • Conrad, Christopher
  • Dabrowska-Zielinska, Katarzyna
  • De Abelleyra, Diego
  • Gurdak, Radoslaw
  • Kumar, Vineet
  • Kussul, Nataliia
  • Mandal, Dipankar
  • Rao, Y. S.
  • Saliendra, Nicanor
  • Shelestov, Andrii
  • Spengler, Daniel
  • Verón, Santiago R.
  • Homayouni, Saeid
  • Becker-Reshef, Inbal
Publisher
MDPI AG

Abstract

The water cloud model (WCM) can be inverted to estimate leaf area index (LAI) using the intensity of backscatter from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensors. Published studies have demonstrated that the WCM can accurately estimate LAI if the model is effectively calibrated. However, calibration of this model requires access to field measures of LAI as well as soil moisture. In contrast, machine learning (ML) algorithms can be trained to estimate LAI from satellite data, even if field moisture measures are not available. In this study, a support vector machine (SVM) was trained to estimate the LAI for corn, soybeans, rice, and wheat crops. These results were compared to LAI estimates from the WCM. To complete this comparison, in situ and satellite data were collected from seven Joint Experiment for Crop Assessment and Monitoring (JECAM) sites located in Argentina, Canada, Germany, India, Poland, Ukraine and the United States of America (U.S.A.). The models used C-Band backscatter intensity for two polarizations (like-polarization (VV) and cross-polarization (VH)) acquired by the RADARSAT-2 and Sentinel-1 SAR satellites. Both the WCM and SVM models performed well in estimating the LAI of corn. For the SVM, the correlation (R) between estimated LAI for corn and LAI measured in situ was reported as 0.93, with a root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.64 m2m−2 and mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.51 m2m−2. The WCM produced an R-value of 0.89, with only slightly higher errors (RMSE of 0.75 m2m−2 and MAE of 0.61 m2m−2) when estimating corn LAI. For rice, only the SVM model was tested, given the lack of soil moisture measures for this crop. In this case, both high correlations and low errors were observed in estimating the LAI of rice using SVM (R of 0.96, RMSE of 0.41 m2m−2 and MAE of 0.30 m2m−2). However, the results demonstrated that when the calibration points were limited (in this case for soybeans), the WCM outperformed the SVM model. This study demonstrates the importance of testing different modeling approaches over diverse agro-ecosystems to increase confidence in model performance.

Subject

  • Agriculture,
  • Crops,
  • Agricultural technology,
  • Radar

Rights

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

ISSN
2072-4292

Article

Journal title
Remote Sensing
Journal volume
13
Journal issue
7
Article number
1348
Accepted date
2021-03-30
Submitted date
2021-02-01

Citation(s)

Hosseini, M., McNairn, H., Mitchell, S., Robertson, L. D., Davidson, A., Ahmadian, N., Bhattacharya, A., Borg, E., Conrad, C., Dabrowska-Zielinska, K., de Abelleyra, D., Gurdak, R., Kumar, V., Kussul, N., Mandal, D., Rao, Y. S., Saliendra, N., Shelestov, A., Spengler, D., … Becker-Reshef, I. (2021). A comparison between support vector machine and water cloud model for estimating crop leaf area index. Remote Sensing, 13(7), 1348. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13071348

Download(s)

URI

Collection(s)

Agricultural practices, equipment, and technology

Full item page

Full item page

Page details

Date modified: