EGU26-15525, updated on 14 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15525
EGU General Assembly 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Monday, 04 May, 09:45–09:55 (CEST)
 
Room 2.23
Bridging the gaps between field-based ecology and remote sensing to estimate plant functional diversity: a systematic review
José Cerda-Paredes1,2, Dylan Craven1,3, and Javier Lopatin1,2,4
José Cerda-Paredes et al.
  • 1Data Observatory, Chile (jose.cerda@dataobservatory.net)
  • 2Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Chile
  • 3GEMA Center for Genomics, Ecology & Environment, Universidad Mayor, Chile
  • 4Center for Climate Resilience Research (CR)2, University of Chile, Chile

Understanding plant functional diversity across scales requires integrating field-based ecology and remote sensing, yet these disciplines differ in how traits are measured, and upscaled. We synthesized three decades of research to evaluate conceptual and methodological convergence between these disciplines. Our results reveal that field-based ecology has undergone longer conceptual development and covers a broader range of traits, while remote sensing has experienced rapid growth driven by technological advances. Despite these differences, both disciplines are increasingly converging on similar concepts. However, major gaps in empirical coverage persist across biomes in both disciplines. While vegetation-dominated ecosystems have been extensively studied, extreme ecosystems remain comparatively undersampled. Trait analyses demonstrate a broad conceptual flexibility in defining "functional traits", yet both disciplines converge on a core set (e.g., plant height, leaf area, and leaf nitrogen content), reflecting their central role in plant strategies and spectral detectability. Remote sensing approaches differ in whether functional diversity is inferred from spatially aggregated mixtures at the pixel or community level or from resolved individual plants. Our synthesis underscores the potential for methodological synergy. Harmonizing trait definitions, scaling assumptions, and computational steps is essential to building a unified, multiscale framework for monitoring functional diversity in the context of global change.

How to cite: Cerda-Paredes, J., Craven, D., and Lopatin, J.: Bridging the gaps between field-based ecology and remote sensing to estimate plant functional diversity: a systematic review, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15525, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15525, 2026.