Web-LiDAR Forest Inventory: TreeTop Application
Web-LiDAR Forest Inventory: TreeTop Application
USDA - Rocky Mountain Research Station - RMRS SILVA, C.A.; HUDAK, A. T.; CROOKSTON, N. L. (2014)
Smoothing CHM?
No
Flow chart of the method for individual tree detection on the LiDAR CHM
Default = 1.37 m
Tree Top
FWS:
3x3 5x5 7x7 9x9
1 11x11
13x13
The deciduous, pines and combined equations are from Popescu and Wynne (2004). Popescu, S.C. and R.H. Wynne, 2004. Seeing the trees in the forest: using lidar and multispectral data fusion with local filtering and variable window size for estimating tree height. Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing 70(5): 589-604.
30
Deciduous
Pines Combined
25 20 15 10 5 0 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48
Height (m)
6. Smoothing CHM
40% canopy
60% trunk
Acknowledgement:
Funding to support Carlos Silvas development of Web-LiDAR and its underlying functions was provided through a grant (RC-2243) from the Department of Defense Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program: Patterns and processes: monitoring and understanding plant diversity in frequently burned longleaf pine landscapes. J. OBrien, PI; R. Mitchell, A. Hudak, L. Dyer, Co-PIs.
The LiDAR data provided as an example dataset is from a longleaf pine forest at Eglin AFB. Its collection was funded by a grant (11-2-1-11) from the Joint Fire Science Program: Data set for fuels, fire behavior, smoke, and fire effects model development and evaluationthe RxCADRE project. R. Ottmar, PI; multiple Co-Is.
Objective:
Web-LiDAR was developed to support lidar-based forest inventory and management at Eglin Air Force Base (AFB), Florida, USA. However, it has general applicability to other forests in other ecosystems, and we encourage users to test it broadly.