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Remote Sensing Technologies for Enhancing Forest Inventories: A Review

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING
Volume 42, Issue 5, Pages 619-641

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07038992.2016.1207484

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Funding

  1. NSERC Discovery grant
  2. Canadian Wood Fibre Centre, of the Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada

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Forest inventory and management requirements are changing rapidly in the context of an increasingly complex set of economic, environmental, and social policy objectives. Advanced remote sensing technologies provide data to assist in addressing these escalating information needs and to support the subsequent development and parameterization of models for an even broader range of information needs. This special issue contains papers that use a variety of remote sensing technologies to derive forest inventory or inventory-related information. Herein, we review the potential of 4 advanced remote sensing technologies, which we posit as having the greatest potential to influence forest inventories designed to characterize forest resource information for strategic, tactical, and operational planning: airborne laser scanning (ALS), terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), digital aerial photogrammetry (DAP), and high spatial resolution (HSR)/very high spatial resolution (VHSR) satellite optical imagery. ALS, in particular, has proven to be a transformative technology, offering forest inventories the required spatial detail and accuracy across large areas and a diverse range of forest types. The coupling of DAP with ALS technologies will likely have the greatest impact on forest inventory practices in the next decade, providing capacity for a broader suite of attributes, as well as for monitoring growth over time.

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