Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8866308 | Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment | 2018 | 36 Pages |
Abstract
This paper presents the first attempt to include soil moisture information from remote sensing in the tools available to desert locust managers. The soil moisture requirements were first assessed with the users. The main objectives of this paper are: i) to describe and validate the algorithms used to produce a soil moisture dataset at 1â¯km resolution relevant to desert locust management based on DisPATCh methodology applied to SMOS and ii) the development of an innovative approach to derive high-resolution (100â¯m) soil moisture products from Sentinel-1 in synergy with SMOS data. For the purpose of soil moisture validation, 4 soil moisture stations where installed in desert areas (one in each user country). The soil moisture 1â¯km product was thoroughly validated and its accuracy is amongst the best available soil moisture products. Current comparison with in-situ soil moisture stations shows good values of correlation (R>0.7) and low RMSE (below 0.04âm3 mâ3). The low number of acquisitions on wet dates has limited the development of the soil moisture 100âm product over the Users Areas. The Soil Moisture product at 1âkm will be integrated into the national and global Desert Locust early warning systems in national locust centres and at DLIS-FAO, respectively.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Computers in Earth Sciences
Authors
Maria Jose Escorihuela, Olivier Merlin, Vivien Stefan, Gorka Moyano, Omar Ali Eweys, Mehrez Zribi, Sidi Kamara, Ahmed Salem Benahi, Mohamed Abdallahi Babah Ebbe, Jamal Chihrane, Saïd Ghaout, Sory Cissé, Fakaba Diakité, Mohammed Lazar,