Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery

Tillage practices have changed dramatically during the past several decades as agricultural specialists have recognized the unfavorable environmental effects of mechanized tillage. Alternatively, conservation tillage management can mitigate adverse environmental impacts of tillage, such as soil and...

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Main Author: Zheng, Baojuan
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/19201
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-192012020-09-29T05:37:31Z Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery Zheng, Baojuan Geography Campbell, James B. Jr. Wynne, Randolph H. Galbraith, John M. de Beurs, Kirsten conservation agriculture crop residue tillage remote sensing multi-temporal Landsat Tillage practices have changed dramatically during the past several decades as agricultural specialists have recognized the unfavorable environmental effects of mechanized tillage. Alternatively, conservation tillage management can mitigate adverse environmental impacts of tillage, such as soil and water degradation. Adoption of conservation tillage has continued to increase since its first introduction, which raises questions of when and where it is practiced. Spatial and temporal specifics of tillage practices form important dimensions for development of effective crop management practices and policies.  Because Landsat has been and will continue to image the Earth globally, it provides opportunities for systematic mapping of crop residue cover (CRC) /tillage practices. Thus, the overall objective of this study is to develop methodologies to improve our ability to monitor crop management across different landscapes in a time-efficient and cost-effective manner using Landsat TM and ETM+ imagery, which is addressed in three separate studies. The first study found that previous efforts to estimate CRC along a continuum using Landsat-based tillage indices were unsuccessful because they neglected the key temporal changes in agricultural surfaces caused by tilling, planting, and crop emergence at the start of the growing season. The first study addressed this difficulty by extracting minimum values of multi-temporal NDTI (Normalized Difference Tillage Index) spectral profiles, designated here as the minNDTI method. The minNDTI improves crop residue estimation along a continuum (R2 = 0.87) as well as tillage classification accuracy (overall accuracy > 90%).   A second study evaluated effectiveness of the minNDTI approach for assessing CRC at multiple locations over several years, and compared minNDTI to hyperspectral tillage index (CAI), and the ASTER tillage index (SINDRI). The minNDTI is effective across four different locations (R2 of 0.56 ~ 0.93). The third study, built upon the second study, addressed the Landsat ETM+ missing data issue, and devised methodologies for producing field-level tillage data at broad scales (multiple counties).  In summary, this research demonstrates that the minNDTI technique is currently the best alternative for monitoring CRC and tillage practices from space, and provides a foundation for monitoring crop residue cover at broad spatial and temporal scales. Ph. D. 2013-02-19T22:35:35Z 2013-02-19T22:35:35Z 2012-12-12 Dissertation vt_gsexam:25 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/19201 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic conservation
agriculture
crop residue
tillage
remote sensing
multi-temporal
Landsat
spellingShingle conservation
agriculture
crop residue
tillage
remote sensing
multi-temporal
Landsat
Zheng, Baojuan
Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
description Tillage practices have changed dramatically during the past several decades as agricultural specialists have recognized the unfavorable environmental effects of mechanized tillage. Alternatively, conservation tillage management can mitigate adverse environmental impacts of tillage, such as soil and water degradation. Adoption of conservation tillage has continued to increase since its first introduction, which raises questions of when and where it is practiced. Spatial and temporal specifics of tillage practices form important dimensions for development of effective crop management practices and policies.  Because Landsat has been and will continue to image the Earth globally, it provides opportunities for systematic mapping of crop residue cover (CRC) /tillage practices. Thus, the overall objective of this study is to develop methodologies to improve our ability to monitor crop management across different landscapes in a time-efficient and cost-effective manner using Landsat TM and ETM+ imagery, which is addressed in three separate studies. The first study found that previous efforts to estimate CRC along a continuum using Landsat-based tillage indices were unsuccessful because they neglected the key temporal changes in agricultural surfaces caused by tilling, planting, and crop emergence at the start of the growing season. The first study addressed this difficulty by extracting minimum values of multi-temporal NDTI (Normalized Difference Tillage Index) spectral profiles, designated here as the minNDTI method. The minNDTI improves crop residue estimation along a continuum (R2 = 0.87) as well as tillage classification accuracy (overall accuracy > 90%).   A second study evaluated effectiveness of the minNDTI approach for assessing CRC at multiple locations over several years, and compared minNDTI to hyperspectral tillage index (CAI), and the ASTER tillage index (SINDRI). The minNDTI is effective across four different locations (R2 of 0.56 ~ 0.93). The third study, built upon the second study, addressed the Landsat ETM+ missing data issue, and devised methodologies for producing field-level tillage data at broad scales (multiple counties).  In summary, this research demonstrates that the minNDTI technique is currently the best alternative for monitoring CRC and tillage practices from space, and provides a foundation for monitoring crop residue cover at broad spatial and temporal scales. === Ph. D.
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
Zheng, Baojuan
author Zheng, Baojuan
author_sort Zheng, Baojuan
title Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
title_short Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
title_full Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
title_fullStr Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
title_full_unstemmed Broad-scale Assessment of Crop Residue Management Using Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Imagery
title_sort broad-scale assessment of crop residue management using multi-temporal remote sensing imagery
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/19201
work_keys_str_mv AT zhengbaojuan broadscaleassessmentofcropresiduemanagementusingmultitemporalremotesensingimagery
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