Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees
Urban forests are part of the global forest network, providing important benefits to human societies. Advances in remote-sensing technology can create detailed 3D images of trees, giving novel insights into tree structure and function. We used terrestrial laser scanning and quantitative structural m...
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doaj-4c6c2bcfab574be49268bba5e63f03e22021-08-26T14:17:28ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-08-01133153315310.3390/rs13163153Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban TreesGeorgios Arseniou0David W. MacFarlane1Dominik Seidel2Department of Forestry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USADepartment of Forestry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USADepartment of Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones, University of Göttingen, 37073 Göttingen, GermanyUrban forests are part of the global forest network, providing important benefits to human societies. Advances in remote-sensing technology can create detailed 3D images of trees, giving novel insights into tree structure and function. We used terrestrial laser scanning and quantitative structural models to provide comprehensive characterizations of the woody surface area allometry of urban trees and relate them to urban tree anatomy, physiology, and structural complexity. Fifty-six trees of three species (<i>Gleditsia triacanthos</i> L., <i>Quercus macrocarpa</i> Michx., <i>Metasequoia glyptostroboides</i> Hu & W.C. Cheng) were sampled on the Michigan State University campus. Variations in surface area allocation to non-photosynthesizing components (main stem, branches) are related to the fractal dimension of tree architecture, in terms of structural complexity (box-dimension metric) and the distribution of “path” lengths from the tree base to every branch tip. The total woody surface area increased with the box-dimension metric, but it was most strongly correlated with the 25th percentile of path lengths. These urban trees mainly allocated the woody surface area to branches, which changed with branch order, branch-base diameter, and branch-base height. The branch-to-stem area ratio differed among species and increased with the box-dimension metric. Finally, the woody surface area increased with the crown surface area of the study trees across all species combined and within each species. The results of this study provide novel data and new insights into the surface area properties of urban tree species and the links with structural complexity and constraints on tree morphology.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/16/3153terrestrial laser scanningwoody surface areacrown surface areaurban ecology<i>Gleditsia triacanthos</i><i>Quercus macrocarpa</i> |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Georgios Arseniou David W. MacFarlane Dominik Seidel |
spellingShingle |
Georgios Arseniou David W. MacFarlane Dominik Seidel Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees Remote Sensing terrestrial laser scanning woody surface area crown surface area urban ecology <i>Gleditsia triacanthos</i> <i>Quercus macrocarpa</i> |
author_facet |
Georgios Arseniou David W. MacFarlane Dominik Seidel |
author_sort |
Georgios Arseniou |
title |
Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees |
title_short |
Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees |
title_full |
Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees |
title_fullStr |
Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees |
title_full_unstemmed |
Woody Surface Area Measurements with Terrestrial Laser Scanning Relate to the Anatomical and Structural Complexity of Urban Trees |
title_sort |
woody surface area measurements with terrestrial laser scanning relate to the anatomical and structural complexity of urban trees |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Remote Sensing |
issn |
2072-4292 |
publishDate |
2021-08-01 |
description |
Urban forests are part of the global forest network, providing important benefits to human societies. Advances in remote-sensing technology can create detailed 3D images of trees, giving novel insights into tree structure and function. We used terrestrial laser scanning and quantitative structural models to provide comprehensive characterizations of the woody surface area allometry of urban trees and relate them to urban tree anatomy, physiology, and structural complexity. Fifty-six trees of three species (<i>Gleditsia triacanthos</i> L., <i>Quercus macrocarpa</i> Michx., <i>Metasequoia glyptostroboides</i> Hu & W.C. Cheng) were sampled on the Michigan State University campus. Variations in surface area allocation to non-photosynthesizing components (main stem, branches) are related to the fractal dimension of tree architecture, in terms of structural complexity (box-dimension metric) and the distribution of “path” lengths from the tree base to every branch tip. The total woody surface area increased with the box-dimension metric, but it was most strongly correlated with the 25th percentile of path lengths. These urban trees mainly allocated the woody surface area to branches, which changed with branch order, branch-base diameter, and branch-base height. The branch-to-stem area ratio differed among species and increased with the box-dimension metric. Finally, the woody surface area increased with the crown surface area of the study trees across all species combined and within each species. The results of this study provide novel data and new insights into the surface area properties of urban tree species and the links with structural complexity and constraints on tree morphology. |
topic |
terrestrial laser scanning woody surface area crown surface area urban ecology <i>Gleditsia triacanthos</i> <i>Quercus macrocarpa</i> |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/16/3153 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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