4.7 Article

SLAM-Aided Stem Mapping for Forest Inventory with Small-Footprint Mobile LiDAR

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages 4588-4606

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f6124390

Keywords

mobile laser scanning; IMU; GNSS; forest inventory; SLAM

Categories

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland project Towards Precision Forestry
  2. Academy of Finland project Interaction of Lidar/Radar Beams with Forests Using Mini-UAV and Mobile Forest Tomography
  3. Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence in Laser Scanning Research (CoE-LaSR) [272195]
  4. Chinese Academy of Science [181811KYSB20130003]
  5. Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology [2015DFA70930]
  6. National Nature Science Foundation of China [41304004]
  7. European Community [606971]
  8. Academy of Finland [293389]
  9. European Union, the European Regional Development Fund [301130]

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Accurately retrieving tree stem location distributions is a basic requirement for biomass estimation of forest inventory. Combining Inertial Measurement Units (IMU) with Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) is a commonly used positioning strategy in most Mobile Laser Scanning (MLS) systems for accurate forest mapping. Coupled with a tactical or consumer grade IMU, GNSS offers a satisfactory solution in open forest environments, for which positioning accuracy better than one decimeter can be achieved. However, for such MLS systems, positioning in a mature and dense forest is still a challenging task because of the loss of GNSS signals attenuated by thick canopy. Most often laser scanning sensors in MLS systems are used for mapping and modelling rather than positioning. In this paper, we investigate a Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM)-aided positioning solution with point clouds collected by a small-footprint LiDAR. Based on the field test data, we evaluate the potential of SLAM positioning and mapping in forest inventories. The results show that the positioning accuracy in the selected test field is improved by 38% compared to that of a traditional tactical grade IMU + GNSS positioning system in a mature forest environment and, as a result, we are able to produce a unambiguous tree distribution map.

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