Cl. Wiegand et al., PHOTOGRAPHIC AND VIDEOGRAPHIC OBSERVATIONS FOR DETERMINING AND MAPPING THE RESPONSE OF COTTON TO SOIL-SALINITY, Remote sensing of environment, 49(3), 1994, pp. 212-223
Better ways are needed to assess the extent and severity of soil salin
ity in fields in terms of economic impact on crap production and effec
tiveness of reclamation efforts. Procedures to help meet these needs w
ere developed from soil salinity, plant height and boll counts, and di
gitized color infrared aerial photography and videography acquired dur
ing midboll set development stage for four salt-affected cotton (Gossy
pium hirsutum, L.) fields in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Uns
upervised classification procedures were used to produce seven-categor
y spectral maps by field. Regression equations were developed from sal
inity measurements in the surface 30 cm (EC1) at 100-200 sample sites
per field and the photography and videography digital counts at those
same sites. The equations were used to estimate the salinity of each o
f the approximately 100,000 pixels per field, and the salinity categor
ies corresponding to the spectral ones were mapped. The spectral class
ification maps and the estimated salinity maps corresponded well. Boll
counts, made at about 20 sites per field, were converted to lint yiel
d and regressed on NDVI from both the photography and videography; the
correlation coefficient (r) was 0.72 for video and 0.73 for the photo
graphic data. Lint yields decreased by 43 +/- 10 kg ha(-1) per dS m(-1
) increase in EC1, or $52 +/- 12 ha(-1) at current market prices. Our
results illustrate very practical ways to combine image analysis capab
ility, spectral observations, and ground truth to map and quantify the
severity of soil salinity and its effects on crops.