The extrapolation of forest structural attributes from LiDAR has traditionally been restricted to local or regional scales, hindering a thorough assessment of single-year versus time series predictors across expansive spatial scales. We extrapolated the vertical complexity captured by the Land, Vegetation, and Ice Sensor (LVIS) full-wave form LiDAR of boreal forests in the Alaska–Yukon–Northwest Territories region, utilizing predictors from Landsat images from 1989 to 2019. This included both single-year and long-term estimates of vegetation indices, alongside constant factors like terrain slope and location. Random forest regression models comparing the single-year and 15-year and 30-year time series models were applied. Additionally, the potential of estimating horizontal forest complexity from vertical complexity was explored using a moving window approach in the Kluane Valley. While the extended time series marginally enhanced model accuracy, a fine-tuned single-year model proved superior (R2 = 0.84, relative RRMSE = 8.4%). In estimating the horizontal complexity, the variance in a 5 × 5 moving window displayed the most promising results, aligning with traditional horizontal structure measures. Single-year Landsat models could potentially surpass time series models in predicting forest vertical complexity, with the added capability to estimate horizontal complexity using variance in a moving window approach.
CITATION STYLE
Diaz-Kloch, N., & Murray, D. L. (2023). Bridging the Gap: Comprehensive Boreal Forest Complexity Mapping through LVIS Full-Waveform LiDAR, Single-Year and Time Series Landsat Imagery. Remote Sensing, 15(22). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15225274
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