Can We Use the Relationship Between Within-Field Elevation and NDVI as an Indicator of Drought-Stress? - Environmental Software Systems. Data Science in Action
Conference Papers Year : 2020

Can We Use the Relationship Between Within-Field Elevation and NDVI as an Indicator of Drought-Stress?

Abstract

Large farmers’ datasets can help shed light on agroecological processes if used in the context of hypothesis testing. Here we used an anonymized set of data from the geoplatform Akkerweb to better understand the correlation between within-field elevation and normalized differential vegetation index (NDVI, a proxy for biomass). The dataset included 3249 Dutch potato fields, for each of which the cultivar, the field polygon, the year of cultivation and the soil type (clay or sandy) was known. We hypothesize that under dry conditions such correlation is negative, meaning that the lowest portions of the field have more biomass because of water redistribution. From the data, we observed that in dry periods, such as the summer of 2018, the correlation was negative in sandy soils. Furthermore, we observed that early cultivars show a weaker correlation between NDVI and elevation than late cultivars, possibly because early cultivar escape part of the long dry summer spells. We conclude that the correlation between NDVI and elevation may be a useful indicator of drought stress, and deviations from the norm may be useful to evaluate the resistance to drought of individual cultivars.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
493342_1_En_12_Chapter.pdf (592.12 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin Files produced by the author(s)

Dates and versions

hal-03361889 , version 1 (01-10-2021)

Licence

Identifiers

Cite

Bernardo Maestrini, Matthijs Brouwer, Thomas Been, Lambertus Lotz. Can We Use the Relationship Between Within-Field Elevation and NDVI as an Indicator of Drought-Stress?. 13th International Symposium on Environmental Software Systems (ISESS), Feb 2020, Wageningen, Netherlands. pp.122-131, ⟨10.1007/978-3-030-39815-6_12⟩. ⟨hal-03361889⟩
64 View
46 Download

Altmetric

Share

More