Testing of photogrammetry for differentiation of soil organic carbon and biochar in sandy substrates
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Published:2019-03-15
Issue:1
Volume:74
Page:81-91
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ISSN:2194-8798
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Container-title:Geographica Helvetica
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geogr. Helv.
Author:
Fister Wolfgang,Goldman Nina,Mayer Marius,Suter Manuel,Kuhn Nikolaus J.
Abstract
Abstract. Landforms in different environmental ecosystems are formed
through selective erosion and transport mechanisms by wind and water. To
understand their development, biochemical composition, and effect on
neighbouring ecosystems, it is essential to better understand the forming
processes and to be able to monitor the behaviour and transport of particles
through the landscape. Conventional methods to track and differentiate
between organic and inorganic particles usually involve extensive sampling
campaigns that disturb the processes themselves. Therefore, this study aimed
to prove that the method of photogrammetry, which is non-contact and
non-invasive, is able to quantify erosion rates and can also be used to
differentiate between organic and inorganic material. To prove this concept,
a bottom-up experimental rainfall simulation set-up was conducted with sieved
sand substrates of very narrow particle size distribution and biochar under
highly controlled conditions. By using two-dimensional index and reflectance
maps of the surface computed with the software Pix4D, the erosion of biochar
was estimated and compared to the actual erosion amount that was transported
along the plot. The results show that photogrammetry has the potential to
distinguish between a sandy substrate and biochar. An approximate decrease of
5 % in biochar on the plot surfaces was detected in three out of four
rainfall experiments within the first 30 s. After these 30 s, the quality
of detection was significantly reduced due to shadow effects, which were
falsely classified as biochar as well. For future investigations on this
topic, it will be necessary to improve the lighting of the plot and the
post-processing of the images to reduce the error caused by shadows.
Additional approaches that should be taken into account for further test
experiments are the full exclusion of external light, which means working in
the dark, and the use of hyperspectral cameras to detect different carbon
types.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change
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