Remote Sensing of Soil Salinity: Detection and Quantification
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Remote Sensing in Geology, Geomorphology and Hydrology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 December 2023) | Viewed by 19251
Special Issue Editors
Interests: proximal soil sensing; remote sensing; digital soil mapping; pedometrics; spatio-temporal variation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: proximal soil sensing; soil spectroscopy; digital soil mapping; carbon sequestration; soil biogeochemical modeling
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
As a current global issue, soil salinization is critically affecting our limited soil resource and deteriorating the ecosystem health. It poses a great threat to biodiversity, food security and the quality of the environment. To meet the rapidly increasing demand for food, saline soils have been reclaimed for agricultural operations to release extraordinary pressure on existing degraded land resources, which may accelerate the degradation of saline soils. Thus, dynamic detection of soil salinization is an urgent demand to provide more quantitative information for land reclamation since soil salinity has a high spatio-temporal variability. Traditional measurements of soil salinization using laboratory-based methods are expensive and time consuming and thus it can not to meet the increasing demand for accurate information of spatio-temporal of soil salinity. The development of remote sensing technology provides a new solution to fill this gap. Remote sensing technology has great advantages in monitoring soil conditions at a broad scale at high temporal resolution, which enables to map the spatio-temporal variation of soil salinity over a large area.
In this Special Issue, we are seeking original scientific research or manuscript that addresses detection and quantification of soil salinity using passive and/or active remote sensors and platforms (e.g., multi- and hyperspectral domain, SAR, LiDAR, RADAR). The Special Issue welcomes a wide range of contributions from methodological to applied, multidisciplinary research, and aims to provide new implications for connecting researchers working in related field and thus to make a better contribution in dealing with the increasing soil salinization around the world.
Dr. Bifeng Hu
Dr. Songchao Chen
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- soil salinity
- remote sensing
- digital soil mapping
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- multi-sensor fusion
- spatio-temporal modelling
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