Abstract

We examined the performance of airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data obtained in 2011 for leaf area estimation in deciduous broad-leaved forest using the Beer–Lambert law in Takayama, Gifu, Japan. We estimated leaf area index (LAI, allometry-LAI) and vertical leaf area density (LAD) using field survey data by applying allometric equations to estimate leaf-area of trees and a Weibull distribution equation to estimate vertical leaf distribution. We then estimated extinction coefficients (Ke) of LiDAR data for three height layers from the ground to the canopy top using the vertical LAD and vertical laser pulse distribution. The estimated PAI (LiDAR-PAI) using the Beer–Lambert law and Ke, when treating the canopies as three height layers, showed a significant linear relationship with allometry-LAI (p < 0.001). However, LiDAR-PAI when treating the canopies as single layer saturated at a PAI of six. It was similar to the lesser PAI estimation by hemispherical photography or relative photosynthetic photon flux density which treated the canopy as a single layer, compared to LAI measurements by litter traps. It is therefore important to allocate distinct Ke values to each of the multiple height layers for an accurate estimation of PAI and vertical PAD when applying the Beer–Lambert law to airborne LiDAR data.

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