Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory

In remote sensing-based forest inventories 3D point cloud data, such as acquired from airborne laser scanning, are well suited for estimating the volume of growing stock and stand height, but tree species recognition often requires additional optical imagery. A combination of 3D data and...

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Main Authors: Tuominen, Sakari, Balazs, Andras, Kangas, Annika
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2020-01-01
Series:Silva Fennica
Online Access:https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/10291
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spelling doaj-3f1ff5931a0f4d718ad597d5bee593452020-12-15T11:55:13ZengFinnish Society of Forest ScienceSilva Fennica2242-40752020-01-0154510.14214/sf.10291Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventoryTuominen, SakariBalazs, AndrasKangas, Annika In remote sensing-based forest inventories 3D point cloud data, such as acquired from airborne laser scanning, are well suited for estimating the volume of growing stock and stand height, but tree species recognition often requires additional optical imagery. A combination of 3D data and optical imagery can be acquired based on aerial imaging only, by using stereo photogrammetric 3D canopy modeling. The use of aerial imagery is well suited for large-area forest inventories, due to low costs, good area coverage and temporally rapid cycle of data acquisition. Stereo-photogrammetric canopy modeling can also be applied to previously acquired imagery, such as for aerial ortho-mosaic production, assuming that the imagery has sufficient stereo overlap. In this study we compared two stereo-photogrammetric canopy models combined with contemporary satellite imagery in forest inventory. One canopy model was based on standard archived imagery acquired primarily for ortho-mosaic production, and another was based on aerial imagery whose acquisition parameters were better oriented for stereo-photogrammetric canopy modeling, including higher imaging resolution and greater stereo-coverage. Aerial and satellite data were tested in the estimation of growing stock volume, volumes of main tree species, basal area and diameter and height. Despite the better quality of the latter canopy model, the difference of the accuracy of the forest estimates based on the two different data sets was relatively small for most variables (differences in RMSEs were 0â20%, depending on variable). However, the estimates based on stereo-photogrammetrically oriented aerial data retained better the original variation of the forest variables present in the study area.https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/10291
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tuominen, Sakari
Balazs, Andras
Kangas, Annika
spellingShingle Tuominen, Sakari
Balazs, Andras
Kangas, Annika
Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
Silva Fennica
author_facet Tuominen, Sakari
Balazs, Andras
Kangas, Annika
author_sort Tuominen, Sakari
title Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
title_short Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
title_full Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
title_fullStr Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
title_sort comparison of photogrammetric canopy models from archived and made-to-order aerial imagery in forest inventory
publisher Finnish Society of Forest Science
series Silva Fennica
issn 2242-4075
publishDate 2020-01-01
description In remote sensing-based forest inventories 3D point cloud data, such as acquired from airborne laser scanning, are well suited for estimating the volume of growing stock and stand height, but tree species recognition often requires additional optical imagery. A combination of 3D data and optical imagery can be acquired based on aerial imaging only, by using stereo photogrammetric 3D canopy modeling. The use of aerial imagery is well suited for large-area forest inventories, due to low costs, good area coverage and temporally rapid cycle of data acquisition. Stereo-photogrammetric canopy modeling can also be applied to previously acquired imagery, such as for aerial ortho-mosaic production, assuming that the imagery has sufficient stereo overlap. In this study we compared two stereo-photogrammetric canopy models combined with contemporary satellite imagery in forest inventory. One canopy model was based on standard archived imagery acquired primarily for ortho-mosaic production, and another was based on aerial imagery whose acquisition parameters were better oriented for stereo-photogrammetric canopy modeling, including higher imaging resolution and greater stereo-coverage. Aerial and satellite data were tested in the estimation of growing stock volume, volumes of main tree species, basal area and diameter and height. Despite the better quality of the latter canopy model, the difference of the accuracy of the forest estimates based on the two different data sets was relatively small for most variables (differences in RMSEs were 0â20%, depending on variable). However, the estimates based on stereo-photogrammetrically oriented aerial data retained better the original variation of the forest variables present in the study area.
url https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/10291
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AT balazsandras comparisonofphotogrammetriccanopymodelsfromarchivedandmadetoorderaerialimageryinforestinventory
AT kangasannika comparisonofphotogrammetriccanopymodelsfromarchivedandmadetoorderaerialimageryinforestinventory
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