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Sensitivity of Sentinel-1 Backscatter to Management-Related Disturbances in Temperate Forests

Urheber*innen

van der Woude,  Sietse
External Organizations;

Reiche,  Johannes
External Organizations;

Sterck,  Frank
External Organizations;

Nabuurs,  Gert-Jan
External Organizations;

Vos,  Marleen
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/herold

Herold,  Martin
1.4 Remote Sensing, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

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5025699.pdf
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Zitation

van der Woude, S., Reiche, J., Sterck, F., Nabuurs, G.-J., Vos, M., Herold, M. (2024): Sensitivity of Sentinel-1 Backscatter to Management-Related Disturbances in Temperate Forests. - Remote Sensing, 16, 9, 1553.
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16091553


Zitierlink: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5025699
Zusammenfassung
The rapid and accurate detection of forest disturbances in temperate forests has become increasingly crucial as policy demands and climate pressure on these forests rise. The cloud-penetrating Sentinel-1 radar constellation provides frequent and high-resolution observations with global coverage, but few studies have assessed its potential for mapping disturbances in temperate forests. This study investigated the sensitivity of temporally dense C-band backscatter data from Sentinel-1 to varying management-related disturbance intensities in temperate forests, and the influence of confounding factors such as radar backscatter signal seasonality, shadow, and layover on the radar backscatter signal at a pixel level. A unique network of 14 experimental sites in the Netherlands was used in which trees were removed to simulate different levels of management-related forest disturbances across a range of representative temperate forest species. Results from six years (2016–2022) of Sentinel-1 observations indicated that backscatter seasonality is dependent on species phenology and degree of canopy cover. The backscatter change magnitude was sensitive to medium- and high-severity disturbances, with radar layover having a stronger impact on the backscatter disturbance signal than radar shadow. Combining ascending and descending orbits and complementing polarizations compared to a single orbit or polarization was found to result in a 34% mean increase in disturbance detection sensitivity across all disturbance severities. This study underlines the importance of linking high-quality experimental ground-based data to dense satellite time series to improve future forest disturbance mapping. It suggests a key role for C-band backscatter time series in the rapid and accurate large-area monitoring of temperate forests and, in particular, the disturbances imposed by logging practices or tree mortality driven by climate change factors.