Retrieving chlorophyll content in conifer needles from hyperspectral measurements

2014 
Spectrally continuous hyperspectral data can be used to detect subtle features in the leaf optical spectra, which correlate especially well with major leaf pigments such as the leaf chlorophyll content. Extensive field and laboratory measurements were carried out at 10 sites in black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.)) forests near Sudbury, Canada, to collect leaf optical spectra, leaf pigment contents, and leaf biophysical parameters. It was found that black spruce needles sampled from different sites, age classes, and branch orientations demonstrated variability in both optical properties and chlorophyll contents. The variability in needle optical spectra showed a good correlation (R2 = 0.63) between the average visible absorptance and needle chlorophyll content. The leaf optical model PROSPECT was modified to incorporate the edge effects of needles on light transfer through them. Two leaf biophysical parameters, namely needle width and thickness, were introduced into the model to take into account the effec...
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