Abstract

Forests play a vital role in terrestrial carbon cycling; therefore, monitoring forest biomass at local to global scales has become a challenging issue in the context of climate change. In this study, we investigated the backscattering properties of Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) Phased Array L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR) data in cashew and rubber plantation areas of Cambodia. The PALSAR backscattering coefficient (σ0) had different responses in the two plantation types because of differences in biophysical parameters. The PALSAR σ0 showed a higher correlation with field-based measurements and lower saturation in cashew plants compared with rubber plants. Multiple linear regression (MLR) models based on field-based biomass of cashew (C-MLR) and rubber (R-MLR) plants with PALSAR σ0 were created. These MLR models were used to estimate natural forest biomass in Cambodia. The cashew plant-based MLR model (C-MLR) produced better results than the rubber plant-based MLR model (R-MLR). The C-MLR-estimated natural forest biomass was validated using forest inventory data for natural forests in Cambodia. The validation results showed a strong correlation (R2 = 0.64) between C-MLR-estimated natural forest biomass and field-based biomass, with RMSE = 23.2 Mg/ha in deciduous forests. In high-biomass regions, such as dense evergreen forests, this model had a weaker correlation because of the high biomass and the multiple-story tree structure of evergreen forests, which caused saturation of the PALSAR signal.

Highlights

  • The global demand for forests and forest products is increasing because of population growth

  • This study demonstrates the capability of Phased Array L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR) dual polarimetric (HH and HV) data for forest biomass estimation because of the high penetration of L-band SAR

  • We developed an empirical model based on plantation biomass and PALSAR s0 and applied it to natural forests in Cambodia

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Summary

Introduction

The global demand for forests and forest products is increasing because of population growth. To meet this demand, the importance of plantations has increased because they have high wood-production rates compared with natural forests [1]. Different types of plantations are established for different purposes, and most are planted as monocultures [6]. A recent report by Forest Resource Assessment [2] showed that plantation forests account for 7% (264 million ha) of total global forest area. Cashew and rubber plants are the major plantation species in Cambodia [9] Both species are exotics, and the two types of plantations differ in their canopy cover, tree size, orientation of branches, and tree distribution

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