Radiative Transfer Model-Integrated Approach for Hyperspectral Simulation of Mixed Soil-Vegetation Scenarios and Soil Organic Carbon Estimation
- verfasst von
- Asmaa Abdelbaki, Robert Milewski, Mohammadmehdi Saberioon, Katja Berger, José A.M. Demattê, Sabine Chabrillat
- Abstract
Soils serve as critical carbon reservoirs, playing an essential role in climate change mitigation and agricultural sustainability. Accurate soil property determination relies on soil spectral reflectance data from Earth observation (EO), but current vegetation models often oversimplify soil conditions. This study introduces a novel approach that combines radiative transfer models (RTMs) with open-access soil spectral libraries to address this challenge. Focusing on conditions of low soil moisture content (SMC), photosynthetic vegetation (PV), and non-photosynthetic vegetation (NPV), the coupled Marmit–Leaf–Canopy (MLC) model is used to simulate early crop growth stages. The MLC model, which integrates MARMIT and PRO4SAIL2, enables the generation of mixed soil–vegetation scenarios. A simulated EO disturbed soil spectral library (DSSL) was created, significantly expanding the EU LUCAS cropland soil spectral library. A 1D convolutional neural network (1D-CNN) was trained on this database to predict Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) content. The results demonstrated relatively high SOC prediction accuracy compared to previous approaches that rely only on RTMs and/or machine learning approaches. Incorporating soil moisture content significantly improved performance over bare soil alone, yielding an R2 of 0.86 and RMSE of 4.05 g/kg, compared to R2 = 0.71 and RMSE = 6.01 g/kg for bare soil. Adding PV slightly reduced accuracy (R2 = 0.71, RMSE = 6.31 g/kg), while the inclusion of NPV alongside moisture led to modest improvement (R2 = 0.74, RMSE = 5.84 g/kg). The most comprehensive model, incorporating bare soil, SMC, PV, and NPV, achieved a balanced performance (R2 = 0.76, RMSE = 5.49 g/kg), highlighting the importance of accounting for all surface components in SOC estimation. While further validation with additional scenarios and SOC prediction methods is needed, these findings demonstrate, for the first time, using radiative-transfer simulations of mixed vegetation-soil-water environments, that an EO-DSSL approach enhances machine learning-based SOC modeling from EO data, improving SOC mapping accuracy. This innovative framework could significantly improve global-scale SOC predictions, supporting the design of next-generation EO products for more accurate carbon monitoring.
- Organisationseinheit(en)
-
Abteilung Bodenkunde
- Externe Organisation(en)
-
GFZ Helmholtz-Zentrum für Geoforschung
Fayoum University (FU)
Universidade de Sao Paulo
- Typ
- Artikel
- Journal
- Remote sensing
- Band
- 17
- ISSN
- 2072-4292
- Publikationsdatum
- 09.07.2025
- Publikationsstatus
- Veröffentlicht
- Peer-reviewed
- Ja
- ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
- Allgemeine Erdkunde und Planetologie
- Ziele für nachhaltige Entwicklung
- SDG 13 – Klimaschutzmaßnahmen
- Elektronische Version(en)
-
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142355 (Zugang:
Offen)