Back to Search Start Over

Assessing the potential of synthetic and ex situ airborne laser scanning and ground plot data to train forest biomass models

Authors :
Schäfer, J.
Winiwarter, L.
Weiser, H.
Novotný, J.
Höfle, B.
Schmidtlein, S.
Henniger, Hans
Krok, G.
Stereńczak, K.
Fassnacht, F.E.
Schäfer, J.
Winiwarter, L.
Weiser, H.
Novotný, J.
Höfle, B.
Schmidtlein, S.
Henniger, Hans
Krok, G.
Stereńczak, K.
Fassnacht, F.E.
Source :
ISSN: 0015-752X
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Airborne laser scanning data are increasingly used to predict forest biomass over large areas. Biomass information cannot be derived directly from airborne laser scanning data; therefore, field measurements of forest plots are required to build regression models. We tested whether simulated laser scanning data of virtual forest plots could be used to train biomass models and thereby reduce the amount of field measurements required. We compared the performance of models that were trained with (i) simulated data only, (ii) a combination of simulated and real data, (iii) real data collected from different study sites, and (iv) real data collected from the same study site the model was applied to. We additionally investigated whether using a subset of the simulated data instead of using all simulated data improved model performance. The best matching subset of the simulated data was sampled by selecting the simulated forest plot with the highest correlation of the return height distribution profile for each real forest plot. For comparison, a randomly selected subset was evaluated. Models were tested on four forest sites located in Poland, the Czech Republic, and Canada. Model performance was assessed by root mean squared error (RMSE), squared Pearson correlation coefficient (r⁠), and mean error (ME) of observed and predicted biomass. We found that models trained solely with simulated data did not achieve the accuracy of models trained with real data (RMSE increase of 52–122 %, r decrease of 4–18 %). However, model performance improved when only a subset of the simulated data was used (RMSE increase of 21–118 %, r decrease of 5–14 % compared to the real data model), albeit differences in model performance when using the best matching subset compared to using a randomly selected subset were small. Using simulated data for model training always resulted in a strong underprediction of biomass. Extending sparse real training datasets with simulated data decreased RMSE and i

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 0015-752X
Notes :
ISSN: 0015-752X, Forestry, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1414532056
Document Type :
Electronic Resource