Abstract

Abstract. Observation and quantification of the Earth's surface is undergoing a revolutionary change due to the increased spatial resolution and extent afforded by light detection and ranging (lidar) technology. As a consequence, lidar-derived information has led to fundamental discoveries within the individual disciplines of geomorphology, hydrology, and ecology. These disciplines form the cornerstones of critical zone (CZ) science, where researchers study how interactions among the geosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere shape and maintain the "zone of life", which extends from the top of unweathered bedrock to the top of the vegetation canopy. Fundamental to CZ science is the development of transdisciplinary theories and tools that transcend disciplines and inform other's work, capture new levels of complexity, and create new intellectual outcomes and spaces. Researchers are just beginning to use lidar data sets to answer synergistic, transdisciplinary questions in CZ science, such as how CZ processes co-evolve over long timescales and interact over shorter timescales to create thresholds, shifts in states and fluxes of water, energy, and carbon. The objective of this review is to elucidate the transformative potential of lidar for CZ science to simultaneously allow for quantification of topographic, vegetative, and hydrological processes. A review of 147 peer-reviewed lidar studies highlights a lack of lidar applications for CZ studies as 38 % of the studies were focused in geomorphology, 18 % in hydrology, 32 % in ecology, and the remaining 12 % had an interdisciplinary focus. A handful of exemplar transdisciplinary studies demonstrate lidar data sets that are well-integrated with other observations can lead to fundamental advances in CZ science, such as identification of feedbacks between hydrological and ecological processes over hillslope scales and the synergistic co-evolution of landscape-scale CZ structure due to interactions amongst carbon, energy, and water cycles. We propose that using lidar to its full potential will require numerous advances, including new and more powerful open-source processing tools, exploiting new lidar acquisition technologies, and improved integration with physically based models and complementary in situ and remote-sensing observations. We provide a 5-year vision that advocates for the expanded use of lidar data sets and highlights subsequent potential to advance the state of CZ science.

Highlights

  • Complex interactions among the geosphere, ecosphere, and hydrosphere give rise to present-day landforms, vegetation, and corresponding water and energy fluxes

  • We provide a 5-year vision that advocates for the expanded use of lidar data sets and highlights subsequent potential to advance the state of Critical zone (CZ) science

  • Our review found that most lidar studies to date have had a single disciplinary objective and that the CZ community is does not typically use the overlapping information in space and time generated by lidar (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Complex interactions among the geosphere, ecosphere, and hydrosphere give rise to present-day landforms, vegetation, and corresponding water and energy fluxes. Depending on the data collection system and platform, observations can be made at the landscape scale (> 1000 km2) and at spatial resolutions capable of capturing fine-scale processes (< 10 cm) These unique measurement capabilities offered by lidar have the potential to help answer transdisciplinary research questions, which transcend a single discipline, capture greater complexity, and create new intellectual advances that are synergistic (across disciplines) in nature. We first present the state of the science on applying lidar to disciplinary-specific research in geomorphology, hydrology, and ecology, 1.2, and 1.3, respectively 2.2 we describe how lidar-derived information is uniquely suited to advance three CZ research topics beyond the current state of the science: (1) quantifying change detection, (2) parameterization and verification of physical models, and (3) improved understanding of CZ.

Advances in geomorphology using lidar
Advances in hydrology using lidar
Current toolkits and open questions using lidar in CZ science
Lidar as a transdisciplinary CZ tool
10-1 Saltation
Applying lidar in CZ science
Change detection
Scaling CZ processes
Model parameterization and verification
Adoption and utilization of lidar data sets
Data acquisition technology
Linkages to in situ observations
Linkages to satellite remote sensing
Findings
A proposed 5-year vision
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