M. Bulusu, Florian Ellsäßer, C. Stiegler, J. Ahongshangbam, Isa Marques, H. Hendrayanto, A. Röll, D. Hölscher
{"title":"UAV-based thermography reveals spatial and temporal variability of evapotranspiration from a tropical rainforest","authors":"M. Bulusu, Florian Ellsäßer, C. Stiegler, J. Ahongshangbam, Isa Marques, H. Hendrayanto, A. Röll, D. Hölscher","doi":"10.3389/ffgc.2023.1232410","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Evapotranspiration (ET) from tropical forests plays a significant role in regulating the climate system. Forests are diverse ecosystems, encompass heterogeneous site conditions and experience seasonal fluctuations of rainfall. Our objectives were to quantify ET from a tropical rainforest using high-resolution thermal images and a simple modeling framework. In lowland Sumatra, thermal infrared (TIR) images were taken from an uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) of upland and riparian sites during both dry and wet seasons. We predicted ET from land surface temperature data retrieved from the TIR images by applying the DATTUTDUT energy balance model. We further compared the ET estimates to ground-based sap flux measurements for selected trees and assessed the plot-level spatial and temporal variability of ET across sites and seasons. Average ET across sites and seasons was 0.48 mm h–1, which is comparable to ET from a nearby commercial oil palm plantation where this method has been validated against eddy covariance measurements. For given trees, a positive correlation was found between UAV-based ET and tree transpiration derived from ground-based sap flux measurements, thereby corroborating the observed spatial patterns. Evapotranspiration at upland sites was 11% higher than at riparian sites across all seasons. The heterogeneity of ET was lower at upland sites than at riparian sites, and increased from the dry season to the wet season. This seasonally enhanced ET variability can be an effect of local site conditions including partial flooding and diverse responses of tree species to moisture conditions. These results improve our understanding of forest-water interactions in tropical forests and can aid the further development of vegetation-atmosphere models. Further, we found that UAV-based thermography using a simple, energy balance modeling scheme is a promising method for ET assessments of natural (forest) ecosystems, notably in data scarce regions of the world.","PeriodicalId":12538,"journal":{"name":"Frontiers in Forests and Global Change","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Frontiers in Forests and Global Change","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2023.1232410","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Evapotranspiration (ET) from tropical forests plays a significant role in regulating the climate system. Forests are diverse ecosystems, encompass heterogeneous site conditions and experience seasonal fluctuations of rainfall. Our objectives were to quantify ET from a tropical rainforest using high-resolution thermal images and a simple modeling framework. In lowland Sumatra, thermal infrared (TIR) images were taken from an uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) of upland and riparian sites during both dry and wet seasons. We predicted ET from land surface temperature data retrieved from the TIR images by applying the DATTUTDUT energy balance model. We further compared the ET estimates to ground-based sap flux measurements for selected trees and assessed the plot-level spatial and temporal variability of ET across sites and seasons. Average ET across sites and seasons was 0.48 mm h–1, which is comparable to ET from a nearby commercial oil palm plantation where this method has been validated against eddy covariance measurements. For given trees, a positive correlation was found between UAV-based ET and tree transpiration derived from ground-based sap flux measurements, thereby corroborating the observed spatial patterns. Evapotranspiration at upland sites was 11% higher than at riparian sites across all seasons. The heterogeneity of ET was lower at upland sites than at riparian sites, and increased from the dry season to the wet season. This seasonally enhanced ET variability can be an effect of local site conditions including partial flooding and diverse responses of tree species to moisture conditions. These results improve our understanding of forest-water interactions in tropical forests and can aid the further development of vegetation-atmosphere models. Further, we found that UAV-based thermography using a simple, energy balance modeling scheme is a promising method for ET assessments of natural (forest) ecosystems, notably in data scarce regions of the world.
热带森林的蒸发蒸腾量在调节气候系统中起着重要作用。森林是多种多样的生态系统,包括不同的场地条件,并经历降雨的季节性波动。我们的目标是使用高分辨率的热图像和简单的建模框架来量化热带雨林中的ET。在苏门答腊低地,热红外(TIR)图像是在旱季和雨季从高地和河岸的无人机上拍摄的。我们通过应用DATTUTDUT能量平衡模型,从TIR图像中检索的地表温度数据预测ET。我们进一步将ET估计值与选定树木的地面树液流量测量值进行了比较,并评估了ET在不同地点和季节的地块水平空间和时间变异性。不同地点和季节的平均ET为0.48 mm h–1,与附近商业油棕种植园的ET相当,在该种植园,该方法已根据涡度协方差测量进行了验证。对于给定的树木,基于无人机的ET与地面树液流量测量得出的树木蒸腾之间存在正相关性,从而证实了观测到的空间模式。在所有季节,高地的蒸发蒸腾量都比河岸高11%。ET的异质性在高地低于河岸,并且从旱季到雨季增加。这种季节性增强的ET变异性可能是当地场地条件的影响,包括部分洪水和树种对水分条件的不同反应。这些结果提高了我们对热带森林中森林-水相互作用的理解,并有助于植被-大气模型的进一步发展。此外,我们发现,使用简单的能量平衡建模方案的无人机热成像是一种很有前途的自然(森林)生态系统ET评估方法,尤其是在世界上数据匮乏的地区。