Tor Vergata Earth Observation Laboratory
 

Use of multitemporal SAR data for monitoring vegetation recovery of
Mediterranean burned areas

A. Minchella, F. Del Frate, F. Capogna, S. Anselmi, F. Manes


Abstract

Remote sensing in the optical band is awell-established tool for monitoring changes in forested areas, although it can suffer from limitations, especially where frequent cloud cover occurs. The increased availability of spaceborne radar imagery offers additional means for assessing the state of forests and monitoring their dynamics. In this study, the potential of multi-temporal space-borne SAR data for monitoring vegetation recovery over burned areas next to the Mediterranean coast is investigated. In particular, the study considers a set of ERS-SAR images, C-band and VV polarization, taken over the Castel Fusano pinewood, located near Rome, Italy, devastated in summer 2000 by a fire that burned about 350 ha of the wood. Starting from the analysis of the information contained in the variations, both in burnt and unburnt areas, of the inter annual multitemporal backscattering signatures, the study presents two different approaches, one more qualitative, the other one more quantitative, for the retrieval of the biomass re-growth after the fire. In the quantitative case, the inversion procedure computes the biomass re-growth rate by means of simulations carried out with the Tor Vergata scattering model. The obtained results are satisfactory as they are in agreement with simultaneous analysis based on optical data and in-situ measurement campaigns.

Index Terms--SAR, Forest monitoring, Fires, Forest biomass

Remote Sensing of Environment (2008), doi:10.1016/j.rse.2008.11.004
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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