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Continuity of global MODIS terrestrial primary productivity estimates in the VIIRS era using model-data fusion
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  • K. Arthur Endsley,
  • Maosheng Zhao,
  • John Kimball,
  • Sadashiva Devadiga
K. Arthur Endsley
Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group (NTSG), WA Franke College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana
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Maosheng Zhao
University of Maryland, College Park

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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John Kimball
University of Montana
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Sadashiva Devadiga
Sigma Space Corporation
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Abstract

The NASA Terra and Aqua satellites have been successfully operating for over two decades, exceeding their original 5-year design life. However, the era of NASA’s Earth Observing System (EOS) may be coming to a close as early as 2023. Similarities between the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), aboard Aqua and Terra, and the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) sensors aboard the Suomi NPP, NOAA-20 and NOAA-21 satellites enable potential continuity of long-term earth observational records in the VIIRS era. We conducted a comprehensive calibration and validation of the MODIS MOD17 product, which provided the first global, continuous, weekly estimates of ecosystem gross primary productivity (GPP) and annual estimates of net primary productivity (NPP). Using Bayesian model-data fusion, we combined an 18-year record of tower fluxes with prior data on plant traits and hundreds of field measurements of NPP to benchmark MOD17 and to develop the first terrestrial productivity estimates from VIIRS. The updated mean global GPP (NPP) flux from MOD17 and the new VNP17 for 2012-2018 is 127 ±2.8 Pg C year-1 (58 ±1.1 Pg C year-1), which compares well with independent top-down and bottom-up estimates. Both MOD17 and VNP17 depict upward productivity trends over recent decades, with 2000-2018 MOD17 GPP (NPP) rising by 0.47 (0.25) Pg C year-2 but slowing to 0.35-0.44 (0.11-0.13) Pg C year-2 over 2012-2021, with a greater reduction in the NPP growth rate. The new VIIRS VNP17 product has the potential to extend these continuous estimates of global, terrestrial primary productivity beyond 2030.
01 Mar 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
01 Mar 2023Published in ESS Open Archive