Estimating Grassland Production in Central Europe Using Multi-Source Remote Sensing Data and a Novel Compilation of Field Observations
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Grassland state assessment is essential given their vital role in food security, carbon sequestration and other ecosystem services. Harvested aboveground biomass (HAB), aboveground net primary production (ANPP) and net primary production (NPP) are among the most important grassland state indicators. However, spatially explicit production estimates are largely lacking, and grassland area estimations also remain uncertain. This study addresses these gaps for drought-prone Central European grasslands over 2017-2024. We synthesized grassland extent data, collected extensive field measurements, and used remote sensing-based biophysical proxies to build an ensemble of eight linear models for spatial extrapolation at 10 m resolution. The proxies explained 11-41% of observed biomass (BM) variability. The ensemble mean ANPP was 325.7±56.6 gBM m2 year1 (median: 316 gBM m2 year1), with modest overall interannual variability. Upscaled country-wide ANPP averaged 35.1±9.2 Mt BM year-1 annually (range: 31.9-38.3; median: 35.9 Mt BM year-1). Uncertainty from grassland area estimation was roughly twice that from model choice. Using literature and local data, NPP was estimated at 421±110 gC m2 year-1 (median value), showing low interannual variability. Results highlight grassland area uncertainty as the dominant source of error in biomass estimation, rather than the remote sensing models themselves.