News

New paper in Global Change Biology

Tristan has a new lead author paper in Global Change Biology.  His analysis uses a combination of remote sensing and modeling to show how, by how much, and why water use efficiency has decreased in drylands worldwide – here’s a link to the paper.

New paper in Science Advances!

Led by Jim Randerson, this review paper proposes a ‘weak land sink’ hypothesis, which posits that current models over-estimate the magnitude of the land carbon sink.  Check it out at this link!

New AFM paper from Leticia!

Check out our new paper from recent LCSC PhD Leticia Lee in Agricultural and Forest Meteorology.  We use UAV imagery, airborne LiDAR to show how variation in canopy shadows + solar zenith angle affect estimates of leaf area and fAPAR from harmonized #Landsat and #Sentinel 2 imagery. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agrformet.2023.109389  

New project on coastal resilience spinning up!

We’ve officially started our new coastal resilience project, which is funded by NASA.  This is a collaborative project with Sergio Fagherazzi (PI) and Cedric Fischot (both colleagues at BU), and Marc Simard at NASA JPL.  Minkyu will be the main team member working on this project from team LCSC, and the goal is to use […]

LCSC ABoVE Phase III kick-off!

Several LCSC team members (Mark, Seamore, Kai-Ting) attended the ABoVE Phase III Science Team meeting in San Diego on Jan 22-26.  We had a great meeting, caught up with former LCSC (and project PI) Jon Wang, learned a lot and had a lot of productive meetings.  Also had some great Mexican food, including some very […]

Leticia successfully defends her PhD!!!

Proud to announce that Leticia successfully defended her dissertation today (Phenology, Light Use Efficiency, and Ecosystem Productivity in Temperate Deciduous Forests).  Both the dissertation and the presentation were excellent – CONGRATS AND WAY TO GO LETICIA!!!!

New paper in Remote Sensing of Environment

Exciting new work from post-doc Radost Stanimirova has been published!  In this paper, Radost uses a combination of spectral unmixing and time series methods to quantify changes in bare ground, herbaceous cover, and woody vegetation over the Southern Cone of South America over 20 years.  Very cool methods, even more cool results! Check it out […]

Kai-Ting awarded fellowship from Taiwan!

Third year LCSC Ph.D. student Kai-Ting Hu was recently awarded a fellowship from the government of Taiwan to help support her Ph.D. research.  These are competitive merit-based awards, and Kai-Ting’s selection is a tremendous and well-deserved recognition of her talent and scientific potential. Congratulations Kai-Ting!