Abstract
The imaging frequency and synoptic coverage of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) make possible for the first time a phenological approach to vegetation cover classification in which classes are defined in terms of the timing, the duration and the intensity of photosynthetic activity. This approach, which exploits the strong, approximately linear relationship between the amount of solar irradiance absorbed by plant pigments and shortwave vegetation indices calculated from red and near-infrared reflectances, involves a supervised binary decision tree classification of phytophenological variables derived from multidate normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) imagery. A global phytophenological classification derived from NOAA global vegetation index imagery is presented and discussed. Although interpretation of the various classes is limited considerably by the quality of global vegetation index imagery, the data show clearly the marked temporal asymmetry of terrestrial photosynthetic activity.