4.0 Article

Using high resolution UAV imagery to estimate tree variables in Pinus pinea plantation in Portugal

Journal

FOREST SYSTEMS
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages ESC09-+

Publisher

INST NACIONAL INVESTIGACION TECHNOLOGIA AGRARIA ALIMENTARIA
DOI: 10.5424/fs/2016252-08895

Keywords

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS); forest inventory; tree crown variables; 3D image modelling; canopy height model (CHM); object-based image analysis (OBIA); Structure-from-Motion (SfM)

Categories

Funding

  1. Plan Galego de Investigacion, Innovacion e Crecemento [EM2014-003]
  2. Portuguese Science Foundation [SFRH/BD/52408/2013]
  3. Galician Government [52, p.11343, exp: POS-A/2013/049]
  4. European Social Fund [52, p.11343, exp: POS-A/2013/049]
  5. Pinea project [PIRSES-GA-2010-269257]
  6. Conselleria de Cultura, Educacion e Ordenacion Universitaria [EM2014-003]
  7. Xunta de Galicia [EM2014-003]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aim of study: The study aims to analyse the potential use of lowcost unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) imagery for the estimation of Pinus pinea L. variables at the individual tree level (position, tree height and crown diameter). Area of study: This study was conducted under the PINEA project focused on 16 ha of umbrella pine afforestation (Portugal) subjected to different treatments. Material and methods: The workflow involved: a) image acquisition with consumer-grade cameras on board an UAV; b) orthomosaic and digital surface model (DSM) generation using structure-from-motion (SfM) image reconstruction; and c) automatic individual tree segmentation by using a mixed pixel-and region-based algorithm. Main results: The results of individual tree segmentation (position, height and crown diameter) were validated using field measurements from 3 inventory plots in the study area. All the trees of the plots were correctly detected. The RMSE values for the predicted heights and crown widths were 0.45 m and 0.63 m, respectively. Research highlights: The results demonstrate that tree variables can be automatically extracted from high resolution imagery. We highlight the use of UAV as a fast, reliable and cost-effective technique for small scale applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available