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Forest carbon densities and uncertainties from Lidar, QuickBird, and field measurements in California

Authors :
Gonzalez, Patrick
Gonzalez, Patrick
Asner, Gregory P
Battles, John J
Lefsky, Michael A
Waring, Kristen M
Palace, Michael
Gonzalez, Patrick
Gonzalez, Patrick
Asner, Gregory P
Battles, John J
Lefsky, Michael A
Waring, Kristen M
Palace, Michael
Source :
Remote Sensing of Environment; vol 114, iss 7, 1561-1575; 0034-4257
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Greenhouse gas inventories and emissions reduction programs require robust methods to quantify carbon sequestration in forests. We compare forest carbon estimates from Light Detection and Ranging (Lidar) data and QuickBird high-resolution satellite images, calibrated and validated by field measurements of individual trees. We conducted the tests at two sites in California: (1) 59 km2 of secondary and old-growth coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) forest (Garcia-Mailliard area) and (2) 58 km2 of old-growth Sierra Nevada forest (North Yuba area). Regression of aboveground live tree carbon density, calculated from field measurements, against Lidar height metrics and against QuickBird-derived tree crown diameter generated equations of carbon density as a function of the remote sensing parameters. Employing Monte Carlo methods, we quantified uncertainties of forest carbon estimates from uncertainties in field measurements, remote sensing accuracy, biomass regression equations, and spatial autocorrelation. Validation of QuickBird crown diameters against field measurements of the same trees showed significant correlation (r = 0.82, P < 0.05). Comparison of stand-level Lidar height metrics with field-derived Lorey's mean height showed significant correlation (Garcia-Mailliard r = 0.94, P < 0.0001; North Yuba R = 0.89, P < 0.0001). Field measurements of five aboveground carbon pools (live trees, dead trees, shrubs, coarse woody debris, and litter) yielded aboveground carbon densities (mean ± standard error without Monte Carlo) as high as 320 ± 35 Mg ha- 1 (old-growth coast redwood) and 510 ± 120 Mg ha- 1 (red fir [Abies magnifica] forest), as great or greater than tropical rainforest. Lidar and QuickBird detected aboveground carbon in live trees, 70-97% of the total. Large sample sizes in the Monte Carlo analyses of remote sensing data generated low estimates of uncertainty. Lidar showed lower uncertainty and higher accuracy than QuickBird, due to high correlation

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Remote Sensing of Environment; vol 114, iss 7, 1561-1575; 0034-4257
Notes :
application/pdf, Remote Sensing of Environment vol 114, iss 7, 1561-1575 0034-4257
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391606717
Document Type :
Electronic Resource