Diurnal patterns of bidirectional vegetation indices for wheat canopies

Abstract
The perpendicular vegetation index (PVI) and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) were calculated from Mark II radiometer RED (0.63-0.69 μm) and NIR (0.76–0.90 μ) bidirectional radiance observations for wheat canopies. Measurements were taken over the plant development interval flag leaf expansion to watery ripeness of the kernels during which the leaf area index (LAI) decreased from 40 to 2-5. Spectral data were taken on four cloudless days five times (09.30, 11.00, 12.30, 14.00 and 15.30 hours (central standard time, C.S.T.) at five view zenith, Zv (0, 15, 30,45 and 60°) and eight view azimuth angles relative to the Sun, Av (0, 45, 90, 135, 180, 225, 270 and 315°). The PVI was corrected to a common solar irradiance (PVIC) based on simultaneously observed insolation readings. The PVIC at nadir view (Ž=0°) increased as (l/cosZs) increased on all the measurement days whereas the NDVI changed little as solar zenith angle (Zs) changed. Thus, the PVIC responded to increasing path length through the canopy, or the number of leaves encountered, as solar zenith angle changed whereas the NDVI, which has saturated by the time an LAI of 2 was achieved, was nonresponsive. Off-nadir PVIC ratioed to nadir PVIC increased as the view zenith and solar zenith angles increased (reciprocity in Sun and view angles), and as the view azimuth, A angle approached the Sun position (back scattering stronger that forwardscattering). In contrast, the DNVI was very stable for all view and solar angles consistent with saturation in its response. Even though the PVI is subject to bidirectional effects, it contains more useful information about wheat canopies at LAI > 2 than does the NDVI. The NDVI of the plant canopies changed rapidly at low vegetative cover but its bidirectional sensitivity at low LAI was not investigated.