4.7 Article

A novel method for cliff vegetation estimation based on the unmanned aerial vehicle 3D modeling

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.1006795

Keywords

cliff; vegetation cover; structure from motion; unmanned aerial vehicle; close-range photogrammetry

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The cliff ecosystem is one of the least disturbed ecosystems in nature. This study presents a method to evaluate vegetation cover of karst cliffs using high-resolution imagery captured by a smart unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and three-dimensional reconstruction. The results show a high-low-high distribution of vegetation cover from the bottom to the top of the cliffs.
The cliff ecosystem is one of the least human-disturbed ecosystems in nature, and its inaccessible and often extreme habitats are home to many ancient and unique plant species. Because of the harshness of cliff habitats, their high elevation, steepness of slopes, and inaccessibility to humans, surveying cliffs is incredibly challenging. Comprehensive and systematic information on cliff vegetation cover is not unavailable but obtaining such information on these cliffs is fundamentally important and of high priority for environmentalists. Traditional coverage survey methods-such as large-area normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) statistics and small-area quadratic sampling surveys-are not suitable for cliffs that are close to vertical. This paper presents a semi-automatic systematic investigation and a three-dimensional reconstruction of karst cliffs for vegetation cover evaluation. High-resolution imagery with structure from motion (SFM) was captured by a smart unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). Using approximately 13,000 records retrieved from high-resolution images of 16 cliffs in the karst region Guilin, China, 16 models of cliffs were reconstructed. The results show that this optimized UAV photogrammetry method greatly improves modeling efficiency and the vegetation cover from the bottom to the top of cliffs is high-low-high, and very few cliffs have high-low cover at the top. This study highlights the unique vegetation cover of karst cliffs, which warrants further research on the use of SFM to retrieve cliff vegetation cover at large and global scales.

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