Abstract

Although trees growing outside forests are less perceived in relation to those inside forests, they are also valuable and serve various functions. The biophysical thresholds of Trees Outside Forests (TOF) were recently defined and standardised by the Global Forest Resources Assessments of the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (UNFAO-FRA). With these definitions, standardised mapping of TOF resources became feasible at the national and international level. Here, we aimed to fill the spatial information gap of TOF resources at the national scale with an automated mapping approach based on the UNFAO-FRA definition. The approach was carried out in ArcGIS using adapted UNFAO-FRA biophysical thresholds with routinely acquired countrywide remote sensing data for the whole of Switzerland: a Vegetation Height Model (VHM), a Topographic Landscape Model (TLM Regio) land cover map, and a Forest Mask. Results were validated using stereo-image interpretation data of the Swiss National Forest Inventory (NFI), which verified 95%, 55% and 75% of overall, producer’s and user’s accuracy, respectively. Of the five forest production regions in Switzerland, the highest accuracy was achieved in the Central Plateau and the lowest in the Alps, with accuracy generally decreasing with increasing elevation. Omission and commission errors were highly correlated with the vertical and horizontal accuracy of the VHM, and the applied biophysical thresholds caused both types of error. The final TOF map produced with our approach is at the countrywide scale, is superior to existing TOF information, meets UNFAO-FRA management and reporting needs, and enables the derivation of TOF’s biomass, carbon sequestration potential and species distribution for the whole country.

Highlights

  • Trees Outside Forests (TOF) are limited in their coverage over the landscape, yet they have several important ecosystem functions

  • TOF’s overall appearance in the settlements and agricultural areas where trees occur as TOF was reasonable, whereas trees inside the forest were completely excluded from the mapping approach

  • The lowest Overall Accuracy (OA) was obtained for elevations at 1401–1800 m a.s.l. (0.87) and for the Southern Alps (0.91), while the highest values were obtained for areas at 600–1000 and 1000–1400 m a.s.l. (0.96) and for the Pre-Alps (0.96), Central Plateau (0.95) and Jura (0.95), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Trees Outside Forests (TOF) are limited in their coverage over the landscape, yet they have several important ecosystem functions. They are relevant for ecological (Boffa, 1999; Nair, 2011), recreational (Kienast et al, 2012), social, cultural, economic and pro­ tection tasks (Faye et al, 2011). To include TOF in national and international reporting schemes, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation Forest Resources Assessment (UNFAO-FRA) formed the category ‘Other Land’, separate from ‘Forest’, to take the trees and shrubs into account that do not grow inside forests or other wooded land (Global Forest Resources Assessment 2000 Main Report, 2001)

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