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Relationship of NDVI and oak (Quercus) pollen including a predictive model in the SW Mediterranean region

Authors :
José María Maya-Manzano
Ángela Gonzalo-Garijo
Elia Quirós
Raúl Pecero-Casimiro
Inmaculada Silva-Palacios
Rafael Tormo-Molina
Santiago Fernández-Rodríguez
Rocío González-Naharro
Alejandro Monroy-Colín
Regional Government, Junta de Extremadura (Spain)
European Regional Development Fund
Irish Environmental Protection Agency
Source :
Articles
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Techniques of remote sensing are being used to develop phenological studies. Our goal is to study the correlation among the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) related with oak trees included in three set data polygons (15, 25 and 50 km to aerobiological sampling point as NDVI-15, 25 and 50), and oak (Quercus) daily average pollen counts from 1994 to 2013. The study was developed in the SW Mediterranean region with continuous pollen recording within the mean pollen season of each studied year. These pollen concentrations were compared with NDVI values in the locations containing the vegetation under a study based on two cartographic sources: the Extremadura Forest Map (MFEx) of Spain and the Fifth National Forest Inventory (IFN5) from Portugal. The importance of this work is to propose the relationship among data related in space and time by Spearman and Granger causality tests. 9 out of 20 studied years have shown significant results with the Granger causality test between NDVI and pollen concentration, and in 12 years, significant values were obtained by Spearman test. The distances of influence on the contribution of Quercus pollen to the sampler showed statistically significant results depending on the year. Moreover, a predictive model by using Artificial Neural Network (ANN) was applied with better results in NDVI25 than for NDVI15 or NDVI50. The addition of NDVI25 with the lag of 5 days and some weather parameters in the model was applied with a RMSE of 4.26 (Spearman coefficient r = 0.77) between observed and predicted values. Based on these results, NDVI seems to be a useful parameter to predict airborne pollen.

Details

ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
676
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science of The Total Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09179dcf30048ae3253d8823250dcd9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.04.213