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Remote sensing in BOREAS: Lessons learned
Journal article

Remote sensing in BOREAS: Lessons learned

Abstract

The Boreal Ecosystem Atmosphere Study (BOREAS) was a large, multiyear internationally supported study designed to improve our understanding of the boreal forest biome and its interactions with the atmosphere, biosphere, and the carbon cycle in the face of global climate change. In the initial phase of this study (early 1990s), remote sensing played a key role by providing products needed for planning and modeling. During and after the main BOREAS field campaigns (1994 and 1996), innovative remote sensing approaches and analyses expanded our understanding of the boreal forest in four key areas: (1) definition of vegetation structure, (2) land-cover classification, (3) assessment of the carbon balance, and (4) links between surface properties, weather, and climate. In addition to six BOREAS special issues and over 500 journal papers, a principal legacy of BOREAS is its well-documented and publicly available database, which provides a lasting scientific resource and opportunity to further advance our understanding of this critical northern biome.

Authors

Gamon JA; Huemmrich KF; Peddle DR; Chen J; Fuentes D; Hall FG; Kimball JS; Goetz S; Gu J; McDonald KC

Journal

Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 89, No. 2, pp. 139–162

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 30, 2004

DOI

10.1016/j.rse.2003.08.017

ISSN

0034-4257

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