Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high-resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Pierrat, Zoe Amie | |
Magney, Troy S | |
Richardson, Will P | |
Runkle, Benjamin R K | |
Diehl, Jen L | |
Woodgate, William | |
Smith, William K | |
Johnston, Miriam R | |
Ginting, Yohanes R S | |
Koren, Gerbrand | |
Albert, Loren P | |
Kibler, Christopher L | |
Morgan, Bryn E | |
Barnes, Mallory | |
Uscanga, Adriana | |
Devine, Charles | |
Javadian, Mostafa | |
Meza, Karem | |
Julitta, Tommaso | |
Tagliabue, Giulia | |
Dannenberg, Matthew P | |
Antala, Michal | |
Wong, Christopher Y S | |
Santos, Andre L D | |
Marrs, Julia K | |
Stovall, Atticus E L | |
Liu, Yujie | |
Fisher, Joshua B | |
Gamon, John A | |
Cawse-Nicholson, Kerry |
Subject(s)
Series
New Phytologist
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1469-8137
0028-646X
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39853577
Description
A new proliferation of optical instruments that can be attached to towers over or within ecosystems, or 'proximal' remote sensing, enables a comprehensive characterization of terrestrial ecosystem structure, function, and fluxes of energy, water, and carbon. Proximal remote sensing can bridge the gap between individual plants, site-level eddy-covariance fluxes, and airborne and spaceborne remote sensing by providing continuous data at a high-spatiotemporal resolution. Here, we review recent advances in proximal remote sensing for improving our mechanistic understanding of plant and ecosystem processes, model development, and validation of current and upcoming satellite missions. We provide current best practices for data availability and metadata for proximal remote sensing: spectral reflectance, solar-induced fluorescence, thermal infrared radiation, microwave backscatter, and LiDAR. Our paper outlines the steps necessary for making these data streams more widespread, accessible, interoperable, and information-rich, enabling us to address key ecological questions unanswerable from space-based observations alone and, ultimately, to demonstrate the feasibility of these technologies to address critical questions in local and global ecology.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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New Phytologist - 2025 - Pierrat - Proximal remote sensing an essential tool for bridging the gap between highāresolution.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 3.2 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |