Mapping water content in drying Antarctic moss communities using UAS‐borne SWIR imaging spectroscopy

Author:

Turner Darren1ORCID,Cimoli Emiliano12ORCID,Lucieer Arko1,Haynes Ryan S.1,Randall Krystal34,Waterman Melinda J.34,Lucieer Vanessa2,Robinson Sharon A.34

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography, Planning, and Spatial Sciences, College of Sciences and Engineering University of Tasmania Private Bag 78 Hobart Tasmania 7001 Australia

2. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, College of Sciences and Engineering University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia

3. Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future University of Wollongong Wollongong New South Wales 2522 Australia

4. Centre for Sustainable Ecosystem Solutions, School of Earth, Atmospheric and Life Sciences University of Wollongong Wollongong New South Wales 2522 Australia

Abstract

AbstractAntarctic moss beds are sensitive to climatic conditions, and both their survival and community composition are particularly influenced by the availability of liquid water over summer. As Antarctic regions increasingly face climate pressures (e.g., changing hydrology and heat waves), advancing capabilities to efficiently and non‐destructively monitor water content in moss communities becomes a key research priority. Because of the complexity induced by multiple micro‐climatic drivers and its fragility, tracking the evolution and responses of moss bed moisture requires monitoring methods that are non‐intrusive, efficient, and spatially significant, such as the use of unoccupied aerial systems (UAS). In this study, we combine a multi‐species drying laboratory experiment with short‐wave infrared (SWIR) spectroscopy analyses to first develop a Random Forest regression Model (RFM) capable of predicting Antarctic moss turf water content (~5% error). The RFM was then applied to UAS‐borne SWIR imaging data (900–1700 nm, <16 nm spectral resolution) of the moss beds at high spatial resolution (2 cm) across three sites in the vicinity of Casey Station, Antarctica. The sites differed in terrain, snow cover, and moisture availability to evaluate method capabilities under different conditions. Optimum RFM parameters and input variables (spectral indices and reflectance spectra) were determined. Maps of moss moisture were validated via acquiring moss spectra and water content (using sponges inserted into the moss turf) collected in situ, for which an exponential correlation (R2 = 0.72) was reported. RFM further allowed investigation of the influential spectral variables to model water content in moss and associated spectral water absorption features. We demonstrated that UAS‐borne SWIR imaging is a promising new tool to map and quantify water content in Antarctic moss beds. Hyperspectral mapping facilitates the exploration of the spatial variability of moss health and enables the creation of a baseline against which changes in these moss communities can be measured.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Computers in Earth Sciences,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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