Canadian Forest Service Publications
Estimation of Airborne Lidar-derived Tropical Forest Canopy Height Using Landsat Time Series in Cambodia. 2014. Ota, T., O.S. Ahmed, S.E. Franklin, M.A. Wulder, T. Kajisa, N. Mizoue, S. Yoshida, G. Takao, Y. Hirata, N. Furuya, T. Sano, S. Heng and M. Vuthy. Remote Sensing. Vol. 6, pp. 10750-10772.
Year: 2014
Issued by: Pacific Forestry Centre
Catalog ID: 35794
Language: English
Availability: PDF (download)
Available from the Journal's Web site. †
DOI: 10.3390/rs61110750
† This site may require a fee
Abstract
In this study, we test and demonstrate the utility of disturbance and recovery information derived from annual Landsat time series to predict current forest vertical structure (as compared to the more common approaches, that consider a sample of airborne Lidar and single-date Landsat derived variables). Mean Canopy Height (MCH) was estimated separately using single date, time series, and the combination of single date and time series variables in multiple regression and random forest (RF) models. The combination of single date and time series variables, which integrate disturbance history over the entire time series, overall provided better MCH prediction than using either of the two sets of variables separately. In general, the RF models resulted in improved performance in all estimates over those using multiple regression. The lowest validation error was obtained using Landsat time series variables in a RF model (R2 = 0.75 and RMSE = 2.81 m). Combining single date and time series data was more effective when the RF model was used (opposed to multiple regression). The RMSE for RF mean canopy height prediction was reduced by 13.5% when combining the two sets of variables as compared to the 3.6% RMSE decline presented by multiple regression. This study demonstrates the value of airborne Lidar and long term Landsat observations to generate estimates of forest canopy height using the random forest algorithm.