Comparing terrestrial laser scanning and unmanned aerial vehicle structure from motion to assess top of canopy structure in tropical forests

被引:51
|
作者
Rosca, Sabina [1 ]
Suomalainen, Juha [1 ,2 ]
Bartholomeus, Harm [1 ]
Herold, Martin [1 ]
机构
[1] Wageningen Univ, Lab Geoinformat Sci & Remote Sensing, Droevendaalsesteeg 3, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands
[2] Natl Land Survey Finland, Finnish Geospatial Res Inst, Geodeetinrinne 2, Masala 02430, Finland
关键词
terrestrial LiDAR; terrestrial laser scanning; structure from motion; unmanned aerial vehicle; top of canopy; tropical forest; SMALL-FOOTPRINT LIDAR; TREE HEIGHT; ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS; AIRBORNE LIDAR; POINT CLOUDS; SYSTEM; STANDS; PARAMETERS; INVENTORY; ACCURACY;
D O I
10.1098/rsfs.2017.0038
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) equipped with digital cameras have attracted much attention from the forestry community as potential tools for forest inventories and forest monitoring. This research fills a knowledge gap about the viability and dissimilarities of using these technologies for measuring the top of canopy structure in tropical forests. In an empirical study with data acquired in a Guyanese tropical forest, we assessed the differences between top of canopy models (TCMs) derived from TLS measurements and from UAV imagery, processed using structure from motion. Firstly, canopy gaps lead to differences in TCMs derived from TLS and UAVs. UAV TCMs overestimate canopy height in gap areas and often fail to represent smaller gaps altogether. Secondly, it was demonstrated that forest change caused by logging can be detected by both TLS and UAV TCMs, although it is better depicted by the TLS. Thirdly, this research shows that both TLS and UAVTCMs are sensitive to the small variations in sensor positions during data collection. TCMs rendered from UAV data acquired over the same area at different moments are more similar (RMSE 0.11-0.63 m for tree height, and 0.14-3.05 m for gap areas) than those rendered from TLS data (RMSE 0.21-1.21 m for trees, and 1.02-2.48 m for gaps). This study provides support for a more informed decision for choosing between TLS and UAV TCMs to assess top of canopy in a tropical forest by advancing our understanding on: (i) how these technologies capture the top of the canopy, (ii) why their ability to reproduce the same model varies over repeated surveying sessions and (iii) general considerations such as the area coverage, costs, fieldwork time and processing requirements needed.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Terrestrial laser scanning reveals below-canopy bat trait relationships with forest structure
    Blakey, Rachel V.
    Law, Brad S.
    Kingsford, Richard T.
    Stoklosa, Jakub
    REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 198 : 40 - 51
  • [32] Quantifying tropical forest disturbances using canopy structural traits derived from terrestrial laser scanning
    Ghizoni Santos, Erone
    Henrique Nunes, Matheus
    Jackson, Toby
    Eiji Maeda, Eduardo
    Forest Ecology and Management, 2022, 524
  • [33] Quantifying tropical forest disturbances using canopy structural traits derived from terrestrial laser scanning
    Santos, Erone Ghizoni
    Nunes, Matheus Henrique
    Jackson, Toby
    Maeda, Eduardo Eiji
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2022, 524
  • [34] Improvement of Workflow for Topographic Surveys in Long Highwalls of Open Pit Mines with an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and Structure from Motion
    Zapico, Ignacio
    Laronne, Jonathan B.
    Sanchez Castillo, Lazaro
    Martin Duque, Jose F.
    REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (17)
  • [35] Biomass and Carbon Stock Quantification in Cork Oak Forest of Maamora Using a New Approach Based on the Combination of Aerial Laser Scanning Carried by Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and Terrestrial Laser Scanning Data
    Sanaa, Fadil
    Imane, Sebari
    Mohamed, Bouhaloua
    Kenza, Ait El kadi
    Souhail, Kellouch
    Lfalah, Hamza
    Khadija, Meghraoui
    FORESTS, 2022, 13 (08):
  • [36] A comparison of terrestrial laser scanning and structure-from-motion photogrammetry as methods for digital outcrop acquisition
    Wilkinson, M. W.
    Jones, R. R.
    Woods, C. E.
    Gilment, S. R.
    McCaffrey, K. J. W.
    Kokkalas, S.
    Long, J. J.
    GEOSPHERE, 2016, 12 (06): : 1865 - 1880
  • [37] Simple approach to improving the extraction of canopy metrics from airborne laser scanning data for tropical forests
    Hou, Zhengyang
    Xu, Qing
    Zhang, Chao
    Maltamo, Matti
    Tokola, Timo
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED REMOTE SENSING, 2016, 10
  • [38] Recursive estimation of three-dimensional unmanned aerial vehicle motion and structure based on the L∞-norm
    Kharbat, M.
    Aouf, N.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART G-JOURNAL OF AEROSPACE ENGINEERING, 2012, 226 (G7) : 751 - 762
  • [39] Improving sub-canopy snow depth mapping with unmanned aerial vehicles: lidar versus structure-from-motion techniques
    Harder, Phillip
    Pomeroy, John W.
    Helgason, Warren D.
    CRYOSPHERE, 2020, 14 (06): : 1919 - 1935
  • [40] Integrated use of unmanned aerial vehicle photogrammetry and terrestrial laser scanning to support archaeological analysis: The Acropolis of Selinunte case (Sicily, Italy)
    Costanzo, Antonio
    Pisciotta, Antonino
    Apa, Maria Ilaria Pannaccione
    Bongiovanni, Simona
    Capizzi, Patrizia
    D'Alessandro, Antonino
    Falcone, Sergio
    La Piana, Carmelo
    Martorana, Raffaele
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROSPECTION, 2021, 28 (02) : 153 - 165