Towards tree green crown volume: A methodological approach using terrestrial laser scanning

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Abstract

Crown volume is a tree attribute relevant in a number of contexts, including photosynthesis and matter production, stormresistance, shadowing of lower layers, habitat for various taxa. While commonly the total crown volume is being determined, for example by wrapping a convex hull around the crown, we present here a methodological approach towards assessing the tree green crown volume (TGCVol), the crown volume with a high density of foliage, which we derive by terrestrial laser scanning in a case study of solitary urban trees. Using the RGB information, we removed the hits on stem and branches within the tree crown and used the remaining leaf hits to determine TGCVol from k-means clustering and convex hulls for the resulting green 3D clusters. We derived a tree green crown volume index (TGCVI) relating the green crown volume to the total crown volume. This TGCVI is a measure of how much a crown is "filled with green" and scale-dependent (a function of specifications of the k-means clustering). Our study is a step towards a standardized assessment of tree green crown volume. We do also address a number of remaining methodological challenges.

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Zhu, Z., Kleinn, C., & Nölke, N. (2020, June 1). Towards tree green crown volume: A methodological approach using terrestrial laser scanning. Remote Sensing. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12111841

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