4.7 Article

A comprehensive framework for assessing the accuracy and uncertainty of global above-ground biomass maps

期刊

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
卷 272, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2022.112917

关键词

AGB; Carbon cycle; Map validation; Uncertainty assessment; Remote sensing

资金

  1. IFBN project - ESA
  2. CCI Biomass project - ESA
  3. Russian Science Foundation [19-77-30015]
  4. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [PR140015]
  5. European Commission [776810]
  6. project Transparent monitoring in practice: Supporting post-Paris land use sector mitigation - German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMU)
  7. Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity of the Russian Academy of Sciences [18118052590019-7]
  8. Russian Science Foundation [19-77-30015] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This paper develops a framework to compare and assess the accuracy and uncertainty of above-ground biomass (AGB) maps on a global scale. The study indicates that AGB map errors have map-specific spatial correlation and after bias adjustment, the AGB maps become closer to the values estimated by the Forest Resources Assessment.
Over the past decade, several global maps of above-ground biomass (AGB) have been produced, but they exhibit significant differences that reduce their value for climate and carbon cycle modelling, and also for national estimates of forest carbon stocks and their changes. The number of such maps is anticipated to increase because of new satellite missions dedicated to measuring AGB. Objective and consistent methods to estimate the accuracy and uncertainty of AGB maps are therefore urgently needed. This paper develops and demonstrates a framework aimed at achieving this. The framework provides a means to compare AGB maps with AGB estimates from a global collection of National Forest Inventories and research plots that accounts for the uncertainty of plot AGB errors. This uncertainty depends strongly on plot size, and is dominated by the combined errors from tree measurements and allometric models (inter-quartile range of their standard deviation (SD) = 30-151 Mg ha(-1)). Estimates of sampling errors are also important, especially in the most common case where plots are smaller than map pixels (SD = 16-44 Mg ha(-1)). Plot uncertainty estimates are used to calculate the minimum-variance linear unbiased estimates of the mean forest AGB when averaged to 0.1 degrees. These are used to assess four AGB maps: Baccini (2000), GEOCARBON (2008), GlobBiomass (2010) and CCI Biomass (2017). Map bias, estimated using the differences between the plot and 0.1 degrees map averages, is modelled using random forest regression driven by variables shown to affect the map estimates. The bias model is particularly sensitive to the map estimate of AGB and tree cover, and exhibits strong regional biases. Variograms indicate that AGB map errors have map-specific spatial correlation up to a range of 50-104 km, which increases the variance of spatially aggregated AGB map estimates compared to when pixel errors are independent. After bias adjustment, total pantropical AGB and its associated SD are derived for the four map epochs. This total becomes closer to the value estimated by the Forest Resources Assessment after every epoch and shows a similar decrease. The framework is applicable to both local and global-scale analysis, and is available at https://github.com/arnanaraza/PlotToMap. Our study therefore constitutes a major step towards improved AGB map validation and improvement.

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