Literature DB >> 29503725

Close-range laser scanning in forests: towards physically based semantics across scales.

F Morsdorf1,2, D Kükenbrink1, F D Schneider1,2, M Abegg1,3, M E Schaepman1,2.   

Abstract

Laser scanning with its unique measurement concept holds the potential to revolutionize the way we assess and quantify three-dimensional vegetation structure. Modern laser systems used at close range, be it on terrestrial, mobile or unmanned aerial platforms, provide dense and accurate three-dimensional data whose information just waits to be harvested. However, the transformation of such data to information is not as straightforward as for airborne and space-borne approaches, where typically empirical models are built using ground truth of target variables. Simpler variables, such as diameter at breast height, can be readily derived and validated. More complex variables, e.g. leaf area index, need a thorough understanding and consideration of the physical particularities of the measurement process and semantic labelling of the point cloud. Quantified structural models provide a framework for such labelling by deriving stem and branch architecture, a basis for many of the more complex structural variables. The physical information of the laser scanning process is still underused and we show how it could play a vital role in conjunction with three-dimensional radiative transfer models to shape the information retrieval methods of the future. Using such a combined forward and physically based approach will make methods robust and transferable. In addition, it avoids replacing observer bias from field inventories with instrument bias from different laser instruments. Still, an intensive dialogue with the users of the derived information is mandatory to potentially re-design structural concepts and variables so that they profit most of the rich data that close-range laser scanning provides.

Keywords:  forests; laser scanning; leaf area index; radiative transfer modelling; ray tracing; ultra-light aerial vehicle

Year:  2018        PMID: 29503725      PMCID: PMC5829187          DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2017.0046

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Interface Focus        ISSN: 2042-8898            Impact factor:   3.906


  2 in total

1.  Quantifying the biodiversity value of tropical primary, secondary, and plantation forests.

Authors:  J Barlow; T A Gardner; I S Araujo; T C Avila-Pires; A B Bonaldo; J E Costa; M C Esposito; L V Ferreira; J Hawes; M I M Hernandez; M S Hoogmoed; R N Leite; N F Lo-Man-Hung; J R Malcolm; M B Martins; L A M Mestre; R Miranda-Santos; A L Nunes-Gutjahr; W L Overal; L Parry; S L Peters; M A Ribeiro-Junior; M N F da Silva; C da Silva Motta; C A Peres
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-11-14       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Improved allometric models to estimate the aboveground biomass of tropical trees.

Authors:  Jérôme Chave; Maxime Réjou-Méchain; Alberto Búrquez; Emmanuel Chidumayo; Matthew S Colgan; Welington B C Delitti; Alvaro Duque; Tron Eid; Philip M Fearnside; Rosa C Goodman; Matieu Henry; Angelina Martínez-Yrízar; Wilson A Mugasha; Helene C Muller-Landau; Maurizio Mencuccini; Bruce W Nelson; Alfred Ngomanda; Euler M Nogueira; Edgar Ortiz-Malavassi; Raphaël Pélissier; Pierre Ploton; Casey M Ryan; Juan G Saldarriaga; Ghislain Vieilledent
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2014-06-21       Impact factor: 10.863

  2 in total

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