1. A comparison of lidar, radar, and field measurements of canopy height in pine and hardwood forests of southeastern North America
- Author
-
Scott Hensley, Paul Siqueira, Joseph O. Sexton, Jennifer J. Swenson, and Tyler Bax
- Subjects
Canopy ,Synthetic aperture radar ,Tree canopy ,Forestry ,Shuttle Radar Topography Mission ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Atmospheric sciences ,law.invention ,Lidar ,law ,Interferometric synthetic aperture radar ,Forest ecology ,Environmental science ,Radar ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Forest canopy height is essential information for many forest management activities and is a critical parameter in models of ecosystem processes. Several methods are available to measure canopy height from single-tree to regional and global scales, but the methods vary widely in their sensitivities, leading to different height estimates even for identical stands. We compare four technologies for estimating canopy height in pine and hardwood forests of the Piedmont region of North Carolina, USA: (1) digital elevation data from the global Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) C-band radar interferometry, (2) X- and P-band radar interferometry from the recently developed airborne Geographic Synthetic Aperture Radar (GeoSAR) sensor, (3) small footprint lidar measurements (in pine only), and (4) field measurements acquired by in situ forest mensuration. Differences between measurements were smaller in pine than in hardwood forests, with biases ranging from 5.13 to 12.17 m in pine (1.60–13.77 m for lidar) compared to 6.60–15.28 m in hardwoods and RMSE from 8.40 to 14.21 m in pine (4.73–14.92 m for lidar) compared to 9.54–16.84 in hardwood. GeoSAR measurements of canopy height were among the most comparable measurements overall and showed potential for successful calibration, with R
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF