Forest inventory sensitivity to UAS-based image processing algorithms

Authors

  • Bonifasius Maturbongs College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis OR USA
  • Michael G. Wing College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis OR USA
  • Bogdan Strimbu College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis OR USA
  • Jon Burnett US Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Station, Corvallis OR USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15287/afr.2018.1282

Keywords:

Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS), photogrammetric point clouds, trees segmentation, structure from motion parameters, Douglas-fir

Abstract

Frequent and accurate estimation of forest structure parameters, such as number of trees per hectare or total height, are mandatory for sustainable forest management. Unmanned aircraft system (UAS) equipped with inexpensive sensors can be used to monitor and measure forest structure. The detailed information provided by the UAS allows tree level forest inventory. However, tree identification depends on a variety of parameters defining the image processing and tree segmentation algorithms. The objective of our study was to identify parameter combinations that accurately delineated trees and their heights. We evaluated the impact of different tree segmentation and point cloud generation algorithms on forest inventory from imagery collected with a UAS over a mature Douglas-fir plantation forest. We processed the images with two commonly used commercial software packages, Agisoft PhotoScan and Pix4Dmapper, both implementing image processing algorithms called Structure from Motion. For each software we generated photogrammetric point clouds by varying the parameters defining the implementation. We segmented individual trees and heights using three tree algorithms: Variable Window Filter, Graph-Theoretical, and Watershed Segmentation. We assessed the impact of image processing algorithms on forest inventory by comparing the estimated trees with trees manually identified from the point clouds. We found that the type of tree segmentation and image processing algorithms have a significant effect in accurately identifying trees. For tree height estimation, we found strong evidence that image processing algorithms had significant effects, whereas tree segmentation algorithms did not significantly affect tree height estimation.These findings may be of interest to others that are using high-resolution spatial imagery to estimate forest inventory parameters.

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Published

2019-07-30

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Research article