Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9448829 | Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The relationship between the remotely sensed observations and the amounts of chlorophyll was investigated by comparing chlorophyll expressed as a mass per unit area (area-normalised values) and as a mass per unit mass (content or weight-normalised values) with: (i) reflectance between 350 and 1050 nm and (ii) a ratio of reflectance at 562 and 647 nm (R562/R647). The reflectance at wavelengths >400 nm were found to be more tightly correlated with area-normalised chlorophyll (maximal correlation=â0.51 at 666 nm) than with weight-normalised chlorophyll (maximal correlation=â0.41 at 664 nm). The relationship between R562/R647 and area-normalised chlorophyll was stronger (R2=0.66) than for weight-normalised chlorophyll (R2=0.47). The residuals from the regression of weight-normalised chlorophyll on R562/R647 were strongly correlated with the mass per unit mass of sediment that was <63 μm. There was no such relationship for residuals from the regression of area-normalised chlorophyll on R562/R647. The results demonstrate conclusively that chlorophyll measured as mass per unit mass of sediment, is inappropriate for ground-truthing remotely sensed observations of chlorophyll in intertidal benthic sediments.
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Authors
R.J. Murphy, T.J. Tolhurst, M.G. Chapman, A.J. Underwood,