New tools that rely on NASA satellite date to produce
these maps of plant productivity will provide land managers with earlier
warnings of crops threatened by heat, droughts, cold snaps, or other stresses.
NASA/Skye Caplan
NASA scientists have developed a new set
of tools to monitor plant growth under various conditions throughout the
growing season. The hope is that land managers could use these tools to detect
sudden drops in plant productivity and to respond earlier to events like heat
stress, droughts, and cold snaps. Monitoring the productivity, or how
efficiently plants are producing energy through photosynthesis, is essential
across various landscapes to sustain ecosystems, support rich biodiversity, and
ensure reliable food production.
Throughout the world, different
ecosystems, such as mountains, tropical forests, tundra, and farmland, support
a wide variety of vegetation types. Researchers have previously used
instruments like the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on
NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites to monitor Earth’s ecosystems, analyzing the
specific wavelengths of light related to photosynthesis that MODIS detects. In a study published on July 10, scientists turned to the Ocean Color
Instrument (OCI) aboard NASA’s Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE)
satellite to see what this new data could tell us about plant productivity
throughout the seasons, by observing the time period beginning in March and
stretching through September 2024.
NASA launched PACE in February 2024 to
assess oceanic and atmospheric health. Since then, Earth scientists are
encouraging researchers to use the satellite’s instruments for data
gathered over land. Compared to MODIS, OCI captures a
much broader range of the light that reflects from plants and collects more
data overall. The new monitoring tools rely on data from OCI, providing a
clearer picture of productivity year-round.
~Cathy Ching
Source: NASA Scientists Map Plant Productivity with Data from Ocean Satellite - NASA Science

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