A universal airborne LiDAR approach for tropical forest carbon mapping

被引:312
作者
Asner, Gregory P. [1 ]
Mascaro, Joseph [1 ,2 ]
Muller-Landau, Helene C. [2 ]
Vieilledent, Ghislain [3 ,4 ]
Vaudry, Romuald [5 ]
Rasamoelina, Maminiaina [6 ]
Hall, Jefferson S. [2 ]
van Breugel, Michiel [2 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Inst Sci, Dept Global Ecol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, Panama City, Panama
[3] CIRAD, Forest Ecosyst Goods & Serv UR105, F-34398 Montpellier 5, France
[4] DRP Foret & Biodivers, Antananarivo, Madagascar
[5] GoodPlanet Fdn, F-75116 Paris, France
[6] World Wide Fund Nat, Antananarivo, Madagascar
关键词
Biomass; Carbon emissions; Forest carbon; Light detection and ranging; Rain forest; REDD; Remote sensing; ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS; WOOD DENSITY; CANOPY STRUCTURE; FOOTPRINT LIDAR; PATTERNS; ALLOMETRY; ICESAT;
D O I
10.1007/s00442-011-2165-z
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) is fast turning the corner from demonstration technology to a key tool for assessing carbon stocks in tropical forests. With its ability to penetrate tropical forest canopies and detect three-dimensional forest structure, LiDAR may prove to be a major component of international strategies to measure and account for carbon emissions from and uptake by tropical forests. To date, however, basic ecological information such as height-diameter allometry and stand-level wood density have not been mechanistically incorporated into methods for mapping forest carbon at regional and global scales. A better incorporation of these structural patterns in forests may reduce the considerable time needed to calibrate airborne data with ground-based forest inventory plots, which presently necessitate exhaustive measurements of tree diameters and heights, as well as tree identifications for wood density estimation. Here, we develop a new approach that can facilitate rapid LiDAR calibration with minimal field data. Throughout four tropical regions (Panama, Peru, Madagascar, and Hawaii), we were able to predict aboveground carbon density estimated in field inventory plots using a single universal LiDAR model (r (2) = 0.80, RMSE = 27.6 Mg C ha(-1)). This model is comparable in predictive power to locally calibrated models, but relies on limited inputs of basal area and wood density information for a given region, rather than on traditional plot inventories. With this approach, we propose to radically decrease the time required to calibrate airborne LiDAR data and thus increase the output of high-resolution carbon maps, supporting tropical forest conservation and climate mitigation policy.
引用
收藏
页码:1147 / 1160
页数:14
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