Abstract

Forest canopies and tree crown structures are of high ecological importance. Measuring canopies and crowns by direct inventory methods is time‐consuming and of limited accuracy. High‐resolution inventory tools, in particular terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), is able to overcome these limitations and obtain three‐dimensional (3D) structural information about the canopy with a very high level of detail. The main objective of this study was to introduce a novel method to analyze spatiotemporal dynamics in canopy occupancy at the individual tree and local neighborhood level using high‐resolution 3D TLS data. For the analyses, a voxel grid approach was applied. The tree crowns were modeled through the combination of two approaches: the encasement of all crown points with a 3D α‐shape, which was then converted into a voxel grid, and the direct voxelization of the crown points. We show that canopy occupancy at individual tree level can be quantified as the crown volume occupied only by the respective tree or shared with neighboring trees. At the local neighborhood level, our method enables the precise determination of the extent of canopy space filling, the identification of tree–tree interactions, and the analysis of complementary space use. Using multitemporal TLS data recordings, this method allows the precise detection and quantification of changes in canopy occupancy through time. The method is applicable to a wide range of investigations in forest ecology research, including the study of tree diversity effects on forest productivity or growing space analyses for optimal tree growth. Due to the high accuracy of this novel method, it facilitates the precise analyses even of highly plastic individual tree crowns and, thus, the realistic representation of forest canopies. Moreover, our voxel grid framework is flexible enough to allow for the inclusion of further biotic and abiotic variables relevant to complex analyses of forest canopy dynamics.

Highlights

  • Many key ecosystem functions and processes in forests are related to the structure and spatiotemporal dynamics of the canopy

  • We present an exemplary application of our method based on multitemporal terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) data from a large-­scale biodiversity-­ecosystem functioning (BEF) experiment in subtropical China

  • We present the first description of a voxel grid-­based method to directly and nondestructively analyze the canopy occupancy at the individual tree and local neighborhood level

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Many key ecosystem functions and processes in forests are related to the structure and spatiotemporal dynamics of the canopy. The outcome of competition for canopy space is, strongly affected by tree interactions at the local neighborhood level (Fichtner et al, 2018). These tree neighborhood interactions constitute a key factor determining a tree’s architecture and, growth, and productivity patterns (Fichtner et al, 2017; Potvin & Dutilleul, 2009; Pretzsch, 2014; von Oheimb et al, 2011). The interaction of tree crowns and the temporal development and outcome of this competition for canopy space are of particular interest in forest ecology (Pretzsch, 2014). The main objective of this study was to introduce a novel method to analyze spatiotemporal dynamics in canopy occupancy at the individual tree and local neighborhood level using high-­resolution 3D TLS data. We processed a subset of four plots with a total of 113 tree individuals and conducted change detection analyses for the census interval 2014–2015

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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