Quantifying Aboveground Grass Biomass Using Space-Borne Sensors: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review

Author:

Maake Reneilwe12ORCID,Mutanga Onisimo1ORCID,Chirima George23ORCID,Sibanda Mbulisi14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography & Environmental Science, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 3201, South Africa

2. GeoInformatics Programme, Agricultural Research Council—Natural Resources and Engineering, Pretoria 0001, South Africa

3. Department of Geography, Geoinformatics & Meteorology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0001, South Africa

4. Department of Geography, Environmental Studies & Tourism, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town 7530, South Africa

Abstract

Recently, the move from cost-tied to open-access data has led to the mushrooming of research in pursuit of algorithms for estimating the aboveground grass biomass (AGGB). Nevertheless, a comprehensive synthesis or direction on the milestones achieved or an overview of how these models perform is lacking. This study synthesises the research from decades of experiments in order to point researchers in the direction of what was achieved, the challenges faced, as well as how the models perform. A pool of findings from 108 remote sensing-based AGGB studies published from 1972 to 2020 show that about 19% of the remote sensing-based algorithms were tested in the savannah grasslands. An uneven annual publication yield was observed with approximately 36% of the research output from Asia, whereas countries in the global south yielded few publications (<10%). Optical sensors, particularly MODIS, remain a major source of satellite data for AGGB studies, whilst studies in the global south rarely use active sensors such as Sentinel-1. Optical data tend to produce low regression accuracies that are highly inconsistent across the studies compared to radar. The vegetation indices, particularly the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), remain as the most frequently used predictor variable. The predictor variables such as the sward height, red edge position and backscatter coefficients produced consistent accuracies. Deciding on the optimal algorithm for estimating the AGGB is daunting due to the lack of overlap in the grassland type, location, sensor types, and predictor variables, signalling the need for standardised remote sensing techniques, including data collection methods to ensure the transferability of remote sensing-based AGGB models across multiple locations.

Funder

Agricultural Research Council

National Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Materials Science (miscellaneous),Business and International Management

Reference89 articles.

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