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Effects of plot size, stand density, and scan density on the relationship between airborne laser scanning metrics and the gini coefficient of tree size inequality

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Adnan, S 
Maltamo, M 
Coomes, DA 
Valbuena, R 

Abstract

© 2017, Canadian Science Publishing. All rights reserved. Estimation of the Gini coefficient (GC) of tree sizes using airborne laser scanning (ALS) can provide maps of forest structure across the landscape, which can support sustainable forest management. A challenge arise s in determining the optimal spatial resolution that maximizes the stability and precision of GC estimates, which in turn depends on stand density or ALS scan density. By subsampling different plot sizes within large field plots, we evaluated the optimal spatial resolution by observing changes in GC estimation and in its correlation with ALS metrics. We found that plot size had greater effects than either stand density or ALS scan density on the relationship between GC and ALS metrics. Uncertainty in GC estimates fell as plot size increased. Correlation with ALS metrics showed convex curves with maxima at 250–450m 2 , which thus was considered the optimal plot size and, consequently, the optimal spatial resolution. By thinning the density of the ALS point cloud, we deduced that at least 3 points·m −2 were needed for reliable GC estimates. Many nationwide ALS scan densities are sparser than this, so may be unreliable for GC estimation. Ours is a simple approach for evaluating the optimal spatial resolution in remote sensing estimation of any forest attribute.

Description

Keywords

structural heterogeneity, spatial resolution optimization, sample size optimization, forest structure, LiDAR

Journal Title

Canadian Journal of Forest Research

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0045-5067
1208-6037

Volume Title

47

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing
Sponsorship
European Commission (658180)