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Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment

Airborne laser scanning (ALS) is an active remote sensing technique that uses the time-of-flight measurement principle to capture the three-dimensional structure of the earth's surface with pulsed lasers that transmit nanosecond-long laser pulses with a high pulse repetition frequency. Over for...

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Autores principales: Hollaus, Markus, Wagner, Wolfgang, Maier, Bernhard, Schadauer, Klemens
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3814869/
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author Hollaus, Markus
Wagner, Wolfgang
Maier, Bernhard
Schadauer, Klemens
author_facet Hollaus, Markus
Wagner, Wolfgang
Maier, Bernhard
Schadauer, Klemens
author_sort Hollaus, Markus
collection PubMed
description Airborne laser scanning (ALS) is an active remote sensing technique that uses the time-of-flight measurement principle to capture the three-dimensional structure of the earth's surface with pulsed lasers that transmit nanosecond-long laser pulses with a high pulse repetition frequency. Over forested areas most of the laser pulses are reflected by the leaves and branches of the trees, but a certain fraction of the laser pulses reaches the forest floor through small gaps in the canopy. Thus it is possible to reconstruct both the three-dimensional structure of the forest canopy and the terrain surface. For the retrieval of quantitative forest parameters such as stem volume or biomass it is necessary to use models that combine ALS with inventory data. One approach is to use multiplicative regression models that are trained with local inventory data. This method has been widely applied over boreal forest regions, but so far little experience exists with applying this method for mapping alpine forest. In this study the transferability of this approach to a 128 km(2) large mountainous region in Vorarlberg, Austria, was evaluated. For the calibration of the model, inventory data as operationally collected by Austrian foresters were used. Despite these inventory data are based on variable sample plot sizes, they could be used for mapping stem volume for the entire alpine study area. The coefficient of determination R(2) was 0.85 and the root mean square error (RMSE) 90.9 m(3)ha(−1) (relative error of 21.4%) which is comparable to results of ALS studies conducted over topographically less complex environments. Due to the increasing availability, ALS data could become an operational part of Austrian's forest inventories.
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spelling pubmed-38148692013-11-04 Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment Hollaus, Markus Wagner, Wolfgang Maier, Bernhard Schadauer, Klemens Sensors (Basel) Full Research Paper Airborne laser scanning (ALS) is an active remote sensing technique that uses the time-of-flight measurement principle to capture the three-dimensional structure of the earth's surface with pulsed lasers that transmit nanosecond-long laser pulses with a high pulse repetition frequency. Over forested areas most of the laser pulses are reflected by the leaves and branches of the trees, but a certain fraction of the laser pulses reaches the forest floor through small gaps in the canopy. Thus it is possible to reconstruct both the three-dimensional structure of the forest canopy and the terrain surface. For the retrieval of quantitative forest parameters such as stem volume or biomass it is necessary to use models that combine ALS with inventory data. One approach is to use multiplicative regression models that are trained with local inventory data. This method has been widely applied over boreal forest regions, but so far little experience exists with applying this method for mapping alpine forest. In this study the transferability of this approach to a 128 km(2) large mountainous region in Vorarlberg, Austria, was evaluated. For the calibration of the model, inventory data as operationally collected by Austrian foresters were used. Despite these inventory data are based on variable sample plot sizes, they could be used for mapping stem volume for the entire alpine study area. The coefficient of determination R(2) was 0.85 and the root mean square error (RMSE) 90.9 m(3)ha(−1) (relative error of 21.4%) which is comparable to results of ALS studies conducted over topographically less complex environments. Due to the increasing availability, ALS data could become an operational part of Austrian's forest inventories. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3814869/ Text en © 2007 by MDPI (http://www.mdpi.org). Reproduction is permitted for noncommercial purpose.
spellingShingle Full Research Paper
Hollaus, Markus
Wagner, Wolfgang
Maier, Bernhard
Schadauer, Klemens
Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title_full Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title_fullStr Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title_full_unstemmed Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title_short Airborne Laser Scanning of Forest Stem Volume in a Mountainous Environment
title_sort airborne laser scanning of forest stem volume in a mountainous environment
topic Full Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3814869/
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