The Yellow River Delta, with the most typical new wetland system in warm temperate zone of China, is suffering from increasingly serious salinization. The purpose of this study is to utilize five typical surface parameters, including Albedo (the surface Albedo), NDVI (vegetation index), SI (salinity index),WI (humidity index), and I Fe2O3 (Iron oxide index), to construct 10 different feature spaces and, then, propose two different kinds of monitoring models (point-to-point model and point to line model) of soil salinization. The results showed that the inversion accuracy of the I Fe2O3 feature space detection index based on the pointto-point model was the highest with R 2 ¼0.86. However, the inversion accuracy of Albedo-NDVI feature space detection index based on the point-to-point model is the lowest with R 2 ¼0.72. This is due to the fact that NDVI is not sensitive enough to indicate the status of vegetation grown in the region with low (disturbance of soil background) and high (influenced by the saturation effect) vegetation coverage. The chemical weathering is also a primary cause of soil salinization, during which Fe 2 O 3 is formed by the reaction of oxygen present in the atmosphere with primary Fe 2þ minerals in the soil .Therefore, the AlbedoÀI Fe2O3 feature space detection index based on the point-to-point model has a stronger applicability to monitor the information of soil salinization in the Yellow River Delta. This above point-to-point detection model can be utilized as a better approach to provide data and decision support for the development of agriculture, construction of reservoirs, and protection of natural ecological system in the Yellow River Delta.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.