Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory
Forest inventories assisted by wall-to-wall airborne laser scanning (ALS), have become common practice in many countries. One major cost component in these inventories is the measurement of field sample plots used for constructing models relating biophysical forest attributes to metrics d...
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Finnish Society of Forest Science
2020-01-01
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Series: | Silva Fennica |
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doaj-dd0935b3882c4dec9ea5df61ad20cf5b2020-11-25T03:37:34ZengFinnish Society of Forest ScienceSilva Fennica2242-40752020-01-0154510.14214/sf.10272Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventoryde Lera Garrido, AnaGobakken, TerjeØrka, HansNæsset, ErikBollandsås, Ole Forest inventories assisted by wall-to-wall airborne laser scanning (ALS), have become common practice in many countries. One major cost component in these inventories is the measurement of field sample plots used for constructing models relating biophysical forest attributes to metrics derived from ALS data. In areas where ALS-assisted forest inventories are planned, and in which the previous inventories were performed with the same method, reusing previously acquired field data can potentially reduce costs, either by (1) temporally transferring previously constructed models or (2) projecting field reference data using growth models that can serve as field reference data for model construction with up-to-date ALS data. In this study, we analyzed these two approaches of reusing field data acquired 15 years prior to the current ALS acquisition to estimate six up-to-date forest attributes (dominant tree height, mean tree height, stem number, stand basal area, volume, and aboveground biomass). Both approaches were evaluated within small stands with sizes of approximately 0.37 ha, assessing differences between estimates and ground reference values. The estimates were also compared to results from an up-to-date forest inventory relying on concurrent field- and ALS data. The results showed that even though the reuse of historical information has some potential and could be beneficial for forest inventories, systematic errors may appear prominent and need to be overcome to use it operationally. Our study showed systematic trends towards the overestimation of lower-range ground references and underestimation of the upper-range ground references.https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/10272 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
de Lera Garrido, Ana Gobakken, Terje Ørka, Hans Næsset, Erik Bollandsås, Ole |
spellingShingle |
de Lera Garrido, Ana Gobakken, Terje Ørka, Hans Næsset, Erik Bollandsås, Ole Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory Silva Fennica |
author_facet |
de Lera Garrido, Ana Gobakken, Terje Ørka, Hans Næsset, Erik Bollandsås, Ole |
author_sort |
de Lera Garrido, Ana |
title |
Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory |
title_short |
Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory |
title_full |
Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory |
title_fullStr |
Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reuse of field data in ALS-assisted forest inventory |
title_sort |
reuse of field data in als-assisted forest inventory |
publisher |
Finnish Society of Forest Science |
series |
Silva Fennica |
issn |
2242-4075 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
Forest inventories assisted by wall-to-wall airborne laser scanning (ALS), have become common practice in many countries. One major cost component in these inventories is the measurement of field sample plots used for constructing models relating biophysical forest attributes to metrics derived from ALS data. In areas where ALS-assisted forest inventories are planned, and in which the previous inventories were performed with the same method, reusing previously acquired field data can potentially reduce costs, either by (1) temporally transferring previously constructed models or (2) projecting field reference data using growth models that can serve as field reference data for model construction with up-to-date ALS data. In this study, we analyzed these two approaches of reusing field data acquired 15 years prior to the current ALS acquisition to estimate six up-to-date forest attributes (dominant tree height, mean tree height, stem number, stand basal area, volume, and aboveground biomass). Both approaches were evaluated within small stands with sizes of approximately 0.37 ha, assessing differences between estimates and ground reference values. The estimates were also compared to results from an up-to-date forest inventory relying on concurrent field- and ALS data. The results showed that even though the reuse of historical information has some potential and could be beneficial for forest inventories, systematic errors may appear prominent and need to be overcome to use it operationally. Our study showed systematic trends towards the overestimation of lower-range ground references and underestimation of the upper-range ground references. |
url |
https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/10272 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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