Potential lidar height, intensity, and ratio parameters for plot dominant species discrimination and volume estimation

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Abstract

Precise stand species classification and volume estimation are key research topics for automated forest inventory. This study aims to explore the feasibility of light detection and ranging (lidar) height, intensity, and ratio parameters for discriminating dominant species (Pinus densiflora, Larix kaempferi, and Quercus spp.) and estimating volume at plot scale. To achieve these objectives, multiple linear discriminant and regression analyses were utilized after a separate selection of explanatory variables from extracted 38 lidar height, intensity, and ratio parameters. A kappa accuracy of 0.75 was achieved in discriminating the plot-dominant species from three different species by adopting a combination of nine selected explanatory variables. Further investigation found that dispersion and mean of lidar intensity within a plot are key classifiers of identifying three species. Species-specific optimal plot volume models for Pinus densiflora, Larix kaempferi, and Quercus spp. were evaluated by coefficients of determination of 0.71, 0.74, and 0.56, respectively. Compared to species classification, height-related lidar variables play a key role in modeling forest plot volume. Several explanatory variables for each modeling practice were correlated to canopy vertical and horizontal structures and were enough to represent species-specific characteristics in both approaches for species classification and plot volume estimation. Additionally, observed different variable combinations for two important applications imply that future studies should use proper variable combinations for each purpose.

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APA

Park, T. (2020). Potential lidar height, intensity, and ratio parameters for plot dominant species discrimination and volume estimation. Remote Sensing, 12(19), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12193266

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