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Comparing tree structures derived among airborne, terrestrial and mobile LiDAR systems in urban parks

Cited 3 time in Web of Science Cited 0 time in Scopus
Authors

Choi, Heejoon; Song, Youngkeun

Issue Date
2022-12
Publisher
V.H. Winston and Sons, Inc.
Citation
GIScience and Remote Sensing, Vol.59 No.1, pp.843-860
Abstract
Measuring tree structure using three-dimensional (3D) mapping tools such as light detection and ranging (LiDAR) remote sensing is needed to provide well-managed and designed green spaces. The metrics used to estimate tree structure could be different depending on which LiDAR systems are used. This may lead to confusion and reduce confidence when evaluating tree structures and their derived products, such as plant area index (PAI). Therefore, studies that can determine similarities among measurements derived from different LiDAR systems are needed. In this study, structural canopy metrics in airborne laser scanning (ALS), terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), and mobile laser scanning (MLS) were compared to seek consistencies among the three LiDAR systems. The specific objectives were to test whether the estimates made by the metrics differed depending on single or clustered trees and to test whether LiDAR-derived errors in the metrics are related to tree structures. Tree point clouds were manually classified into single and clustered trees. Heights-related metrics, Rumple Index, area, and PAI were calculated for comparison analysis. Root-mean-square error (RMSE), bias, and Pearson's correlation coefficient (r) were calculated to evaluate the consistencies in each metric among the LiDAR systems. The results showed that the maximum height of the point clouds (ZMAX) and max and mean heights derived from the canopy height models (minCHM and maxCHM) demonstrated good consistency (RMSE% < 10%, Bias% < 10%, and r > 0.900). Moreover, the biases from the ZMAX- and CHM-derived metrics comparisons among the LiDAR systems did not show strong linear relationships with the tree heights and canopy complexities (i.e. Pearson's correlation coefficient r < |0.29|). On the contrary, the 95th percentile (Zq95) height and mean z height (ZMEAN) differed depending on the tree classes and showed significant linear relations with canopy heights and complexity. The configurations of LiDAR systems, such as point density and sensing locations, seem to affect the Zq95, ZMEAN metrics, and PAI. Our results suggest that assessing for consistencies among the different LiDAR systems is required before using multiple LiDAR systems interchangeably to estimate the structure of urban park areas.
ISSN
1548-1603
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/182738
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15481603.2022.2076381
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