Abstract

Light detection and ranging (LiDAR) remote sensing enables accurate estimation and monitoring of vegetation structural properties. Airborne and spaceborne LiDAR is known to provide reliable information on terrain elevation and forest canopy height over closed forests. However, it has rarely been used to characterize savannas, which have a complex structure of trees coexisting with grasses. This letter presents the first validation of spaceborne Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) full-waveform data to retrieve savanna vegetation canopy height that uses field data specifically collected within the GLAS footprints. Two methods were explored in the Kruger National Park, South Africa: one based on the Level 2 Global Land Surface Altimetry Data product and the other using Level 1A Global Altimetry Data (GLA01) with terrain correction. Both methods use Gaussian decomposition of the full waveform. Airborne LiDAR (AL) was also used to quantify terrain variability (slope) and canopy height within the GLAS footprints. The canopy height retrievals were validated with field observations in 23 GLAS footprints and show that the direct method works well over flat areas (Pearson correlation coefficient r = 0.70, , and n = 8 for GLA01) and moderate slopes (r = 0.68, , and n = 9 for GLA01). Over steep slopes in the footprint, however, the retrievals showed no significant correlation and required a statistical correction method to remove the effect of terrain variability on the waveform extent. This method improved the estimation accuracy of maximum vegetation height with correlations (R2 = 0.93, , and n = 6 using the terrain index (g) generated from AL data and R2 = 0.91,, and n = 6 using the GLAS returned waveform width parameter). The results suggest that GLAS can provide savanna canopy height estimations in complex tree/grass plant communities.

Highlights

  • L IGHT detection and ranging (LiDAR) remote sensing provides an accurate and efficient means of estimating and monitoring vegetation structural properties

  • The full-waveform spaceborne satellite LiDAR data, from the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) aboard the Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat), have not been thoroughly evaluated in savanna systems using field data collected within the GLAS footprints yet

  • A comparison of maximum canopy heights derived from GLA14 and GLA01 products gives a Pearson correlation r = 0.78 for the selected study plots

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

L IGHT detection and ranging (LiDAR) remote sensing provides an accurate and efficient means of estimating and monitoring vegetation structural properties. A study by Baccini et al [12] showed potential results of mapping aboveground biomass over tropical Africa using multiyear Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer satellite observation and a wide range of field measurements and compared the results with GLAS LiDAR height metrics. GLAS has been shown to provide accurate estimates of forest canopy height and aboveground biomass in several studies of closed forests [13]–[18]. This letter evaluates the capability of satellite LiDAR data from GLAS for retrieving savanna canopy height in a landscape with highly complex vegetation structure due to the tree/grass coexistence. AL data are utilized to investigate the terrain variability within the GLAS footprints and its effect on the canopy height retrieval accuracy. Color versions of one or more of the figures in this paper are available online at http://ieeexplore.ieee.org

Study Site and Data
Data Processing
Direct Method Using Parameters of GLAS Products
Statistical Methods of Terrain Correction
CONCLUSION
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