Pyorala , J , Liang , X , Saarinen , N , Kankare , V , Wang , Y , Holopainen , M , Hyyppa , J & Vastaranta , M 2018 , ' Assessing branching structure for biomass and wood quality estimation using terrestrial laser scanning point clouds ' , Canadian journal of remote sensing , vol. 44 , no. 5 , pp. 462-475 . https://doi.org/10.1080/07038992.2018.1557040
Title: | Assessing branching structure for biomass and wood quality estimation using terrestrial laser scanning point clouds |
Author: | Pyorala, Jiri; Liang, Xinlian; Saarinen, Ninni; Kankare, Ville; Wang, Yunsheng; Holopainen, Markus; Hyyppa, Juha; Vastaranta, Mikko |
Contributor organization: | Laboratory of Forest Resources Management and Geo-information Science Department of Forest Sciences Forest Health Group Forest Ecology and Management |
Date: | 2018 |
Language: | eng |
Number of pages: | 14 |
Belongs to series: | Canadian journal of remote sensing |
ISSN: | 0703-8992 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1080/07038992.2018.1557040 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/309291 |
Abstract: | Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) accompanied by quantitative tree-modeling algorithms can potentially acquire branching data non-destructively from a forest environment and aid the development and calibration of allometric crown biomass and wood quality equations for species and geographical regions with inadequate models. However, TLS's coverage in capturing individual branches still lacks evaluation. We acquired TLS data from 158 Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) trees and investigated the performance of a quantitative branch detection and modeling approach for extracting key branching parameters, namely the number of branches, branch diameter (b(d)) and branch insertion angle (b) in various crown sections. We used manual point cloud measurements as references. The accuracy of quantitative branch detections decreased significantly above the live crown base height, principally due to the increasing scanner distance as opposed to occlusion effects caused by the foliage. b(d) was generally underestimated, when comparing to the manual reference, while b was estimated accurately: tree-specific biases were 0.89cm and 1.98 degrees, respectively. Our results indicate that full branching structure remains challenging to capture by TLS alone. Nevertheless, the retrievable branching parameters are potential inputs into allometric biomass and wood quality equations. |
Subject: |
Forestry
LiDAR Modeling Point clouds Scots pine SCOTS PINE ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS NORWAY SPRUCE LUMBER GRADE TREE MODELS FOREST GROWTH LIDAR EQUATIONS DIAMETER 4112 Forestry 1171 Geosciences |
Peer reviewed: | Yes |
Rights: | unspecified |
Usage restriction: | openAccess |
Self-archived version: | acceptedVersion |
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