Abstract
Current model of canopy heights in Switzerland: specific applications in forestry A national vegetation height model was calculated for Switzerland for the first time last year using digital aerial images. The ADS80 stereo aerial images, which were routinely gathered by the Swiss Federal Office of Topography (swisstopo), contain information about the height of vegetation in forests. We used the stereo aerial images to first calculate a digital surface model (DSM) with a very high spatial resolution (1 × 1 m). The DSM was then normalized to obtain the actual vegetation heights using a digital terrain model (DTM) based on laser data with the buildings masked out, and to produce a vegetation height model (VHM). Such a model could be calculated in the framework of the Swiss National Forest Inventory (NFI) with consistent methods and a very high level of detail. For covering the whole of Switzerland, we used summer aerial images from the years 2007 to 2012. The VHM reached almost nationwide coverage (98% of the country's surface area). Some areas, such as steep mountainsides or very bright glaciers, were problematic for calculating the model, and appear in it as gaps. Vegetation height information collected with this method is most useful for analyzing entire forest stands, but the data do not have a high enough spatial resolution for single-tree-based analyses. The VHM can be applied in a wide variety of ways. Here, we describe three of these: 1) generating forest masks, 2) extracting forest canopy gaps, and 3) detecting changes in the stocking of a forested area.
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