Search About RLL About Mattick About Supplement Add to Supplement PDF file providers Help

Full record view

Nelson, P.R./ Roland, C./ Macander, M.J./ McCune, B. 2013: Detecting continuous lichen abundance for mapping winter caribou forage at landscape spatial scales. - Remote Sensing of Environment 137: 43-54. [RLL List # 241 / Rec.# 36617]
Keywords: Lichen/ Cladonia/ Usnic acid/ Spectral/ Rangifer tarandus/ Forage/ Mapping/ Landsat 7
Abstract: Spatial variation of available food resources can be difficult to accurately quantify for wide ranging organisms at landscape scales. Lichens with usnic acid, a yellowish pigment, constitute a large portion of caribou winter diet across much of their range. We take a new approach of modeling lichen abundances by capitalizing on unique spectral characteristics of usnic acid lichens. We utilize a recently completed ground reference vegetation data set extending over 12,000 km2 in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska to model the abundance of usnic lichen and other forage vegetation groups. Spectral signatures were obtained for more than 700 vegetation monitoring plots in Denali from Landsat 7 ETM + imagery. We fit models of the absolute percent cover of vegetation groups corresponding to caribou diet items, with a focus on lichens. We used non-parametric multiplicative regression to capture the non-linear relationships between vegetation cover and spectral and environmental data. Different groupings of lichen cover were tried as response variables in addition to usnic lichens to see if other lichen color groups were more detectable. The best fitting lichen model was for usnic acid lichens, which explained 37% of the variation using only three predictors (elevation, bands 1 and 7). Elevation had a non-linear, double-humped shaped relationship to usnic lichen abundance while bands 1 and 7 were positively correlated with usnic lichen cover. These results support previous spectroradiometric ground measurements that indicated usnic lichens were distinctive at those wavelengths. Other vegetation groups had models that explained between 31% and 51% of the variation in cover. Maps of estimated abundance of usnic lichens and other vegetation groups covering the northern half of Denali were generated using our models. These maps enable the study of the role of food resources as a continuous resource in winter habitat selection by caribou, rather than assuming food as a coarser, categorical or thematic variable assigned to discrete areas of the landscape as has been done in most previous studies.
– doi:10.1016/j.rse.2013.05.026

URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0034425713001806

[Email correction]


Upload PDF file to the RLL web site

If you have a PDF file of this RLL/Mattic record, and there are no copyright problems involved, you may upload the file to the RLL/Mattick site. The PDF file will be automatically linked to the paper, and available for download by everyone. Only one PDF file can be linked to a paper, any previous link will be lost.

PDF file::
NB! Legal characters: a-z, A-Z, 0-9, hyphen, underscore, dot (i.e. no diacritics, ampersand, space, etc.).

  


Upload URL to PDF file or web site

Alternatively, you can link this RLL/Mattick record to a PDF file or web page placed somewhere else on the web. Again, only a single link can exist for each record; any previous link will be lost.

Copy and paste the URL you wish to link to this record: