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Author
Asner, Gregory P 1 Beierkuhnlein, Carl 1 Dalponte, Michele 1 Feilhauer, Hannes 1 Foody, Giles M 1 Féret, Jean-Baptiste 1 Geller, Gary N 1 Gillespie, Thomas W 1 He, Kate S 1 Kleijn, David 1 Leitão, Pedro J 1 Lenoir, Jonathan 1 Malavasi, Marco 1 Moudrý, Vítězslav 1 Müllerová, Jana 1 Nagendra, Harini 1 Normand, Signe 1 Ricotta, Carlo 1 Rocchini, Duccio 1 Santos, Maria J 1
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Workplace
Azim Premji University PES Institute of Tech... 1 BIOME Lab Department of Biological Geologica... 1 Biogeography BayCEER University of Bayreuth ... 1 Center for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changi... 1 Center for Global Discovery and Conservation... 1 Department Landscape Ecology and Environment... 1 Department of Biological Sciences Murray Sta... 1 Department of Biology Ecoinformatics and Bio... 1 Department of Chemistry Physics Mathematics ... 1 Department of Earth and Environmental Scienc... 1 Department of Environmental Biology Universi... 1 Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology Un... 1 Department of GIS and Remote Sensing Institu... 1 Department of Geography Remote Sensing Labor... 1 Department of Geography University of Califo... 1 Department of Geography University of Zurich... 1 Department of Land Air and Water Resources U... 1 Department of Remote Sensing University of W... 1 Department of Spatial Sciences Czech Univers... 1 Earth Science Division NASA Headquarters Was... 1
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PubMed
36247363
PubMed Central
PMC9539608
DOI
10.1029/2022jg007026
PII: JGRG22303
Knihovny.cz E-resources
Biodiversity monitoring is an almost inconceivable challenge at the scale of the entire Earth. The current (and soon to be flown) generation of spaceborne and airborne optical sensors (i.e., imaging spectrometers) can collect detailed information at unprecedented spatial, temporal, and spectral resolutions. These new data streams are preceded by a revolution in modeling and analytics that can utilize the richness of these datasets to measure a wide range of plant traits, community composition, and ecosystem functions. At the heart of this framework for monitoring plant biodiversity is the idea of remotely identifying species by making use of the 'spectral species' concept. In theory, the spectral species concept can be defined as a species characterized by a unique spectral signature and thus remotely detectable within pixel units of a spectral image. In reality, depending on spatial resolution, pixels may contain several species which renders species-specific assignment of spectral information more challenging. The aim of this paper is to review the spectral species concept and relate it to underlying ecological principles, while also discussing the complexities, challenges and opportunities to apply this concept given current and future scientific advances in remote sensing.
- Keywords
- airborne sensors, biodiversity, ecoinformatics, hyperspectral images, plant optical types, remote sensing, satellite imagery, vegetation communities,
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- Journal Article MeSH
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