Abstract

Surveys of windthrown trees, resulting from hurricanes and other types of natural disasters, are an important component of agricultural insurance, forestry statistics, and ecological monitoring. Aerial images are commonly used to determine the total area or number of downed trees, but conventional methods suffer from two primary issues: misclassification of windthrown trees due to the interference from other objects or artifacts, and poor extraction resolution when trunk diameters are small. The objective of this study is to develop a coarse-to-fine extraction technique for individual windthrown trees that reduces the effects of these common flaws. The developed method was tested using UAV imagery collected over rubber plantations on Hainan Island after the Nesat typhoon in China on 19 October 2011. First, a coarse extraction of the affected area was performed by analyzing the image spectrum and textural characteristics. A thinning algorithm was then used to simplify downed trees into skeletal structures. Finally, fine extraction of individual trees was achieved using a line detection algorithm. The completeness of windthrown trees in the study area was 75.7% and the correctness was 92.5%. While similar values have been reported in other studies, they often include constraints, such as tree height. This technique is proposed to be a more feasible extraction algorithm as it is capable of achieving low commission errors across a broad range of tree heights and sizes. As such, it is a viable option for extraction of windthrown trees with a small trunk diameter.

Highlights

  • As a result of climate change, the risk of hurricane damage in forests and plantations is increasing

  • Large areas must be surveyed quickly to obtain statistics regarding the number of individual windthrown trees [1,2]

  • There are three primary extraction methods based on remote sensing techniques: (1) artificial visual interpretation, (2) area extraction, and (3) individual windthrown tree extraction

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Summary

Introduction

As a result of climate change, the risk of hurricane damage in forests and plantations is increasing. Large areas must be surveyed quickly to obtain statistics regarding the number of individual windthrown trees [1,2]. There are three primary extraction methods based on remote sensing techniques:. (1) artificial visual interpretation, (2) area extraction, and (3) individual windthrown tree extraction. Fransson et al proposed a method based on visual interpretation over simulated wind-thrown forests at both the single-tree and stand levels using SAR images from the Swedish airborne CARABAS-II and LORA systems after a storm event [3]. Visual interpretation of remote sensing images is relatively simple and results in a high degree of accuracy [4,5].

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