Remote Sensing (May 2013)

Retrieval of Forest Aboveground Biomass and Stem Volume with Airborne Scanning LiDAR

  • Petteri Alho,
  • Hannu Hyyppä,
  • Juha Hyyppä,
  • Xiaowei Yu,
  • Minna Räty,
  • Markus Holopainen,
  • Mikko Vastaranta,
  • Ville Kankare,
  • Risto Viitala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5052257
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 2257 – 2274

Abstract

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Airborne scanning LiDAR is a promising technique for efficient and accuratebiomass mapping due to its capacity for direct measurement of the three-dimensionalstructure of vegetation. A combination of individual tree detection (ITD) and an area-basedapproach (ABA) introduced in Vastaranta et al. [1] to map forest aboveground biomass(AGB) and stem volume (VOL) was investigated. The main objective of this study was totest the usability and accuracy of LiDAR in biomass mapping. The nearest neighbourmethod was used in the ABA imputations and the accuracy of the biomass estimation wasevaluated in the Finland, where single tree-level biomass models are available. The relativeroot-mean-squared errors (RMSEs) in plot-level AGB and VOL imputation were 24.9%and 26.4% when field measurements were used in training the ABA. When ITDmeasurements were used in training, the respective accuracies ranged between 28.5%–34.9%and 29.2%–34.0%. Overall, the results show that accurate plot-level AGB estimates can beachieved with the ABA. The reduction of bias in ABA estimates in AGB and VOL wasencouraging when visually corrected ITD (ITDvisual) was used in training. We conclude that itis not feasible to use ITDvisual in wall-to-wall forest biomass inventory, but it could provide acost-efficient application for acquiring training data for ABA in forest biomass mapping.

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