g/m 2 /VI unit) in terms of the
photosynthetic size of the canopy
(Wiegand et al., 1989; Wiegand and
Richardson, 1990a,b). The numerical
value of ey is similar for the
indices GVI and PVI, and for NDVI and
TSAVI became those VI pairs have
similar magnitudes. It is evident from
the discussion of individual terms in
Eq. [3] that ey will be site
dependent because the second and third
right side terms are.
For given production areas, the Y(zVI)
relation can be calibrated using data
from years of both good and poor
growing conditions and be used to
predict yields in other years. Landsat
data have been available since 1972 and
can be paired with historical yield
observations to develop the
calibrations.
Fig. 4 displays the seasonal pattern in
observed PVI and FPAR for an experiment
conducted in 1989 at Weslaco, TX, with
maize planted at three densities: 7.7,
5.4, and 3.1 plants/m 2 (Wiegand et
al., 1991). The two higher planting
densities absorbed about 80% of the
incident PAR and achieved maximum PVI's
on DOY 129 as tasseling began. We did
not measure L because Eq. [1] shows it
is not necessary. From emergence
through tasseling FPAR(PVI) was
expressed by
FPAR=-0.015+0.036(PVI), r 2 =0.956. [4]
The daily cumulations of PVI and FPAR
values from plant emergence to
physiological maturity of the grain
(Fig. 4), the observed grain yield (Y),
and total aboveground phytomass
increase (ADM) were used to obtain the
values of each term of Eq. [3] shown in
Table 1. Because the functional
relation for all terms in Eq. [3] were
linear when the VI used was PVI, the
slopes of the functional relations
i.e., the efficiency terms ey, ea
and ec, respectively, are closely
approximated by the ratio of the
dependent variable treatment mean to
the independent variable treatment mean
as in the column headings of Table 1.
In Table 1 ey is in the same order as
ea. This same finding was reported
by Wiegand et al. (1989) for rice. In
that study the variation in the ZAPAR(E
PVI) term was about 15% of the mean
value for all treatments, compared with
5% variation among treatments for the
other two right side terms, so that it
dominated the Y(EPVI) term. However,
use of EVI as a practical estimator of
per field or per production area yield,
once the calibrations are developed,
does not hinge on which right side term
affects it most. That can be
determined, to satisfy academic
interests, in intensive plot studies
such as the corn and rice studies
reported here. If the site
dependencies of the right side terms
were known, the left side site
dependencies would be predictable and
would not have to be calibrated by
production areas (Wiegand et al.,
1991) .
Evapotranspiration and Végétation
Ludica
The most limiting factor in crop yields
for important production areas of the
world, such as the Great Plains of the
U. S. and Canada, is water. Cumulative
seasonal évapotranspiration (E ET, mm)
can be related to spectral observations
(Wiegand and Richardson, 1990a) by
E ET(Z VI )= E ET(DM) xDMfeVI). [5]
This equation recognizes the dependence
of seasonal aboveground dry matter (DM)
on seasonalE ET and the sensitivity of
foliage production, observable by VI,
to water stress. [For portions of the
season, such as drying cycles, the
equation can be stated in terms of A ET
and A DM corresponding to differences in
cumulative ET and in DM between the
start and end of the time interval].
In the simplest terms, Eq. [5] is
plausible because the photosynthesis
and transpiration processes are both
functions of the same live tissue that
VI measures and both are driven by
solar radiation. Eq. [5] is not
applied in this paper because we lacked
the water use data, but it is presented
for completeness.
Assumptions and Applicability of SCA
Eqs. [1], [2], [3], and [5] constitute
spectral components analysis (SCA).
SCA assumes implicitly, in agreement
with agronomic and crop modeling
experience, that (a) plant stands
integrate the growing conditions
experienced and express the net
assimilation through the canopies
achieved, (b) stresses severe enough to
affect economic yield will be
detectable through their effects on the
development and persistence of
photosynthetically active tissue in the
canopies, (c) high economic yields
cannot be achieved unless plant
canopies are achieved that fully
utilise available solar radiation just
prior to and during the reproduction
period, (d) vegetation indices
calculated from remote observations in
appropriate wavelengths effectively
measure the photosynthetic size of the
canopies, and (e) commercial producers
use locally recommended agronomic
practices (cultivars, planting rates
and configurations, fertiliser and