Peckham, Scott D., Douglas E. Ahl and Stith T. Gower. 2009. Bryophyte cover estimation in a boreal black spruce forest using airborne lidar and multispectral sensors. Remote Sensing of Environment.
Bryophyte cover estimation in a boreal black spruce forest using airborne lidar and multispectral sensors
Bryophytes are the dominant ground cover vegetation
layer in many boreal forests and in some of these forests the net
primary production of bryophytes exceeds the overstory. Therefore it is
necessary to quantify their spatial coverage and species composition in
boreal forests to improve boreal forest carbon budget estimates. We
present results from a small exploratory test using airborne lidar and
multispectral remote sensing data to estimate the percentage of ground
cover for mosses in a boreal black spruce forest in Manitoba, Canada.
Multiple linear regression was used to fit models that combined spectral
reflectance data from CASI and indices computed from the SLICER canopy
height profile. Three models explained 63-79% of the measured variation
of feathermoss cover while three models explained 69-92% of the measured
variation of sphagnum cover. Root mean square errors ranged from 3-15%
when predicting feathermoss, sphagnum, and total moss ground cover. The
results from this case study warrant further testing for a wider range
of boreal forest types and geographic regions
No TrackBacks
TrackBack URL: http://carbonmodel.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/8

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=deffbf0c-8f9b-4c5b-8848-a6daceb2fbd1)

Leave a comment