Seminar and Events Schedule

If you are interested in receiving email announcements about upcoming seminars, please contact Rohan Boone to get on the SICCS-ECOINFO-SEMINAR listserv.

The calendar below lists all Ecoinformatics and related events, including our weekly seminar. The weekly Ecoinformatics Seminar series includes a full schedule of world-class speakers presenting research talks, skills workshops, and career panels. Please join us each week for this exciting seminar series!

 

  • 11
    January 11, 2021

    Seminar: Arturo Sanchez

    11:30 am-12:30 pm
    January 11, 2021

    Validating MODIS fPAR in a Tropical Dry Forest using Wireless Sensor Networks
    Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa, Ph.D., P.Eng. SM IEEE
    Centre for Earth Observation Sciences, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G2E3
    Email: Arturo.sanchez@ualberta.ca

    The fraction of Photosynthetic Active Radiation (fPAR) is a component of determining canopy photosynthesis and is a crucial component of determining carbon flux product. The MODIS fPAR product has been shown to work well in the Northern Hemisphere but has not been validated in the Tropical Dry Forest which encompasses 42% of all tropical forests. This study uses a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) to produce a representative in-situ Green fPAR product in the Santa Rosa National Park Environmental Monitoring Super Site for validating the MODIS fPAR product between 2013-2017.  This study implements 2-flux fPAR estimation for the in-situ product before subsequently using the Savitsky-Golay derivate-based smoothing, univariate-wavelet transforms, and cross-wavelet analysis to compare the phenometric variables between in-situ and MODIS fPAR.  Results indicate that the MODIS fPAR products are incapable of accurately predicting the onset of green-up or senescence, with detection of these events 18-55 days; however despite these temporal offsets, the annual and inter-seasonal patterns are replicated in both the MODIS and in-situ products with significance (p<0.05).  These patterns break down under extreme water conditions, with the effects of droughts under-predicted by MODIS and hurricane effects not represented at all in the MODIS data.

    Additionally, small scale fPAR changes and intra-seasonal differences are not significantly replicated by the MODIS fPAR products. This study, therefore, illustrates the inflexibility and insensitivity of the MODIS observations, and therefore these products should not be relied upon to give feedback to rapid changes in the phenological cycle of Tropical Dry Forests and more important provide important challenges to efforts to quantity essential climatic variables in tropical dry forest environments.

  • 18
    January 18, 2021

    Martin Luther King, Jr. Day (NAU closed)

    All day
    January 18, 2021

    No additional detail for this event.

  • 25
    January 25, 2021

    Seminar: Chris Lant

    11:30 am-12:30 pm
    January 25, 2021

    Utah State

    Title: Human appropriation of net primary productivity: a critical component of the U.S. food-energy-water system