Stress assessment and spectral characterization of suspected acid deposition damage in red spruce (Picea Rubens) from VermontThe effects of acid deposition on Picea rubens are studied. The Picea rubens located at Camels Hump Mt., Mt. Ascutney, and Ripton, VT were analyzed using stress level evaluations, in situ spectral data, pressure bomb analysis, and aircraft sensors. Spruce stress per circular plot and percent spruce mortality are calculated. The relation between stress levels and elevation and exposure and weather patterns is examined. It is observed that variations in the reflectance curves of the foliage and branches are related to cellular health, the type of cellular arrangement, and the degree of leaf tissue hydration; the leaf and twig specimens from high stress sites are more reflective in the red portion of the visible and less reflective in the NIR portion of the spectrum. The pressure bomb data reveal that the xylem water tension is higher in specimens from high stress sites. It is noted that remote sensing permits discrimination and mapping of suspected acid deposition damage.
Document ID
19860061385
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Rock, B. N. (Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Vogelmann, J. E. (California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, United States)