Forests (Feb 2020)

Automatic Delineation of Forest Patches in Highly Fragmented Landscapes Using Coloured Point Clouds

  • José V. Roces-Díaz,
  • Carlos Cabo,
  • Covadonga Prendes,
  • Celestino Ordoñez,
  • Cristina Santín

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f11020198
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 198

Abstract

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Accurate mapping of landscape features is key for natural resources management and planning. For this purpose, the use of high-resolution remote sensing data has become widespread and is increasingly freely available. However, mapping some target features, such as small forest patches, is still a challenge. Standard, easily replicable, and automatic methodologies to delineate such features are still missing. A common alternative to automated methods is manual delineation, but this is often too time and resource intensive. We developed a simple and automatic method from freely available aerial light detection and ranging (LiDAR) and aerial ortho-images that provide accurate land use mapping and overcome some of the aforementioned limitations. The input for the algorithm is a coloured point cloud, where multispectral information from the ortho-images is associated to each LiDAR point. From this, four-class segmentation and mapping were performed based on vegetation indices and the ground-elevation of the points. We tested the method in four areas in the north-western Iberian Peninsula and compared the results with existent cartography. The completeness and correctness of our algorithm ranging between 78% and 99% in most cases, and it allows for the delineation of very small patches that were previously underrepresented in the reference cartography.

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