Abstract

Locating local maxima of grey levels in aerial images was used for individual tree detection in boreal, closed forest conditions in southern Finland. Image smoothing and binarization were used as preprocessing steps. Binarization was used to restrict the local maxima searching to the bright areas of the images, which were assumed to be tree crowns. Because brightness variations are typical of aerial images, both within and among images, locally adaptive methods were suggested for binarization. Aerial digital camera images and mapped tree data of eight stands in three field plots were used. Four adaptive binarization methods were compared. Differences in tree detection accuracy were small even though the appearance of the binarized images were different. Image smoothing improved the results of tree detection in the three stands that had the largest mean tree size. Tree detection worked fairly well in all seven stands with a density of less than 1500 trees/ha. In these stands, 70–95% of the trees were detected, whereas only 54% were detected in the last stand, which had a density of approximately 1900 trees/ha.

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