Effects of Vegetation Cover on the Radar Sensitivity to Soil Moisture

Abstract
Measurements of the backscattering coefficient σ°, made for bare and vegetation-covered fields, are used in conjunction with a simple backscattering model to evaluate the effects of vegetation cover on the estimation accuracy of soil moisture when derived from radar observations. The results indicate that for soil moisture values below 50 percent of field capacity, the backscatter contribution of the vegetation cover limits the radar's ability to predict soil moisture with an acceptable degree of accuracy. However, for moisture values in the range between 50 and 150 percent of field capacity, the measured σ° is dominated by the soil contribution and the effects of vegetation cover become secondary in importance. It is estimated that in this upper soil moisture range, which is the primary range of interest in hydrology and agriculture, a radar soil moisture prediction algorithm would predict soil moisture with an error of less than ±15 percent of field capacity in 90 percent of the cases.

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