Abstract

Logging, including selective and illegal activities, is widespread, affecting the carbon cycle and the biodiversity of tropical forests. However, automated approaches using very high resolution (VHR) satellite data (≤ 1 m spatial resolution) to accurately track these small-scale human disturbances over large and remote areas are not readily available. The main constraint for performing this type of analysis is the lack of spatially accurate tree-scale validation data. In this study, we assessed the potential of VHR satellite imagery to detect canopy tree loss related to selective logging in closed-canopy tropical forests. To do this, we compared the tree loss detection capability of WorldView-2 and GeoEye-1 satellites with airborne LiDAR, which acquired pre- and post-logging data at the Jamari National Forest in the Brazilian Amazon. We found that logging drove changes in canopy height ranging from −5.6 to −42.2 m, with a mean reduction of −23.5 m. A simple LiDAR height difference threshold of −10 m was enough to map 97% of the logged trees. Compared to LiDAR, tree losses can be detected using VHR satellite imagery and a random forest (RF) model with an average precision of 64%, while mapping 60% of the total tree loss. Tree losses associated with large gap openings or tall trees were more successfully detected. In general, the most important remote sensing metrics for the RF model were standard deviation statistics, especially those extracted from the reflectance of the visible bands (R, G, B), and the shadow fraction. While most small canopy gaps closed within ~2 years, larger gaps could still be observed over a longer time. Nevertheless, the use of annual imagery is advised to reach acceptable detectability. Our study shows that VHR satellite imagery has the potential for monitoring the logging in tropical forests and detecting hotspots of natural disturbance with a low cost at the regional scale.

Highlights

  • Logging, including illegal and selective activities, causes mostly small-scale but spatially widespread disturbances in tropical forests

  • We observed LiDAR ∆canopy height model (CHM) ranging from −5.6 to −42.2 m, with a mean of −23.5 m, for the individual tree crown (ITC) nearby the 172 logged trees in Jamari National Forest (Figure 3A)

  • To address the remote sensing challenges of detecting canopy tree loss associated with logging, we explored the use of multi-date very high resolution (VHR) satellite imagery (≤1 m resolution) and airborne LiDAR to detect these events

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Summary

Introduction

Logging, including illegal and selective activities, causes mostly small-scale but spatially widespread disturbances in tropical forests. Given the impacts of logging on a forest’s carbon stocks and biodiversity, there is a growing interest in tracking these direct human-induced forest disturbances [8]. This is critical for better understanding the contribution of logging to the carbon budget and supporting actions for climate change mitigation [4]. Compared to clear-cutting, logging causes comparably subtler changes to the canopy, such as opening gaps over logging decks and roads, but most of the canopy damage is due to the direct impacts of tree-falls [3]. The detection challenge increases for low-impact logging (i.e., selective or reduced impact logging), since these activities are carefully planned to minimize environmental impacts, by only extracting targeted individual trees of non-endangered species with high market value

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