Abstract

Plant structural parameters are important for ecological studies and for monitoring the environment. Terrestrial laser scanning has become a widely accepted technique for acquiring accurate high‐density three‐dimensional information about plant surfaces; however, this instrument is expensive, technically challenging to operate, heavy, and difficult to transport to hard‐to‐reach areas such as dense forests and undeveloped areas without easy vehicle access. Using Haloxylon ammodendron, a plant widely distributed in arid lands, as an example, we used a consumer‐grade handheld camera to take a series of overlapping images of this plant. Computer vision and photogrammetric software were used to reconstruct highly detailed three‐dimensional data of the plant surface. This surface data was compared to the point cloud of the plant acquired from concomitant terrestrial laser scanning. We demonstrated that the accuracy and degree of completeness of the image‐derived point clouds are comparable to that of laser scanning. Plant structural parameters (such as tree height and crown width) and three‐dimensional models extracted from the point clouds also agree well with a relative difference of less than 5%. Our case study shows that a common camera and image processing software can be an affordable, highly portable, and viable option for acquiring accurate and detailed high‐density and high‐resolution three‐dimensional information about plant structure in the environment. This digitization technique can record the plant and its surrounding environment effectively and efficiently, and it can be applied to many ecological fields and studies.

Highlights

  • Plant structural parameters are key metrics for ecological research and applications

  • The main goal of this study is to determine whether a computer vision-­based technique can be used to obtain accurate high-­ resolution 3D information from saxaul (Haloxylon ammodendron)

  • The purpose of this study was to determine whether detailed and accurate 3D desert plant surface data could be obtained from overlapping images taken with an off-­the-­shelf consumer-­grade handheld camera

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Summary

Introduction

Plant structural parameters are key metrics for ecological research and applications. Obtaining accurate plant structural parameters (such as leaf area, stem diameter, stem form and taper, plant height, and crown width) is important for a wide variety of applications within the fields of forestry and ecology and for environmental studies (Dandois and Ellis, 2013). Individual tree and plot-­level scales (Liang et al, 2016; Newnham et al, 2015; Wallace, Hillman, Reinke, & Hally, 2017). Point cloud data acquired from TLS provide accurate and detailed information about plant size and architecture. Some examples of recent applications include single-­tree and plot-­level 3D modeling (Bauwens et al, 2017; Liang et al, 2014; Mikita, Janata, & Surový, 2016; Miller, Morgenroth, & Gomez, 2015) and topographic geomorphlogical mapping (Micheletti, Chandler, & Lane, 2015; Smith, Carrivick, & Quincey, 2016)

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