4.7 Article

Non-Destructive Biomass Estimation in Mediterranean Alpha Steppes: Improving Traditional Methods for Measuring Dry and Green Fractions by Combining Proximal Remote Sensing Tools

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13152970

Keywords

TLS; remote sensing; above ground biomass; dryland; grass; tussock; spectral indices; raster; voxel; convex hull

Funding

  1. RH2O-ARID by the Junta de Andalucia [P18-RT-5130]
  2. European Union funds for regional development
  3. REBIOARID project - FEDER/Science and Innovation Ministry-National Research Agency through the Spanish National Plan for Research [RTI2018101921-B-I00]
  4. European Union
  5. European Funds for Regional Development
  6. project Laboratorio de espectranomica: nueva herramienta para estudiar la diversidad y funcionamiento de zonas aridas by Programa Estatal de I+D+I from Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [EQC2019-006653-P]
  7. FPU predoctoral fellowship from the Educational, Culture, and Sports Ministry of Spain [FPU17/01886]
  8. EMERGIA program from the General Secretariat of Universities, Research, and Technology of the Council of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge, and Universities [EMERGIA20_00337]

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The Mediterranean region is facing stronger warming effects, leading to negative impacts on productivity, biodiversity, and ecosystem stability. A new non-destructive methodology using TLS point clouds and spectral information has been proposed to monitor AGB and GB dynamics, showing improved results compared to traditional field-based measurements.
The Mediterranean region is experiencing a stronger warming effect than other regions, which has generated a cascade of negative impacts on productivity, biodiversity, and stability of the ecosystem. To monitor ecosystem status and dynamics, aboveground biomass (AGB) is a good indicator, being a surrogate of many ecosystem functions and services and one of the main terrestrial carbon pools. Thus, accurate methodologies for AGB estimation are needed. This has been traditionally done by performing direct field measurements. However, field-based methods, such as biomass harvesting, are destructive, expensive, and time consuming and only provide punctual information, not being appropriate for large scale applications. Here, we propose a new non-destructive methodology for monitoring the spatiotemporal dynamics of AGB and green biomass (GB) of M. tenacissima L. plants by combining structural information obtained from terrestrial laser scanner (TLS) point clouds and spectral information. Our results demonstrate that the three volume measurement methods derived from the TLS point clouds tested (3D convex hull, voxel, and raster surface models) improved the results obtained by traditional field-based measurements. (Adjust-R-2 = 0.86-0.84 and RMSE = 927.3-960.2 g for AGB in OLS regressions and Adjust-R-2 = 0.93 and RMSE = 376.6-385.1 g for AGB in gradient boosting regression). Among the approaches, the voxel model at 5 cm of spatial resolution provided the best results; however, differences with the 3D convex hull and raster surface-based models were very small. We also found that by combining TLS AGB estimations with spectral information, green and dry biomass fraction can be accurately measured (Adjust-R-2 = 0.65-0.56 and RMSE = 149.96-166.87 g in OLS regressions and Adjust-R-2 = 0.96-0.97 and RMSE = 46.1-49.8 g in gradient boosting regression), which is critical in heterogeneous Mediterranean ecosystems in which AGB largely varies in response to climatic fluctuations. Thus, our results represent important progress for the measurement of M. tenacissima L. biomass and dynamics, providing a promising tool for calibration and validation of further studies aimed at developing new methodologies for AGB estimation at ecosystem regional scales.

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