Abstract

Here, we test the feasibility of using two colour indices to assess differences in stand-health metrics in 54 plots of lodgepole pine in British Columbia, Canada. Colour indices of excess greenness (EG) and green chromatic coordinate (GCC) were calculated over two spatial scales from colour images captured from a Cessna T210 flying at 600m above ground level. EG and GCC were then compared to five ground-based metrics of stand health: vigour, mortality, foliar disease occurrence, western gall rust occurrence, and root disease symptoms. Colour indices, calculated at both tree and plot scales, significantly related to the ground-based metrics of stand health, except western gall rust occurrence. These relationships were influenced by canopy closure, but were unaffected by foliar nitrogen concentration. Using linear regression models, ground-based stand-health metrics accounted for 36.5–60.9% of the variability in colour indices. Within research projects, EG and GCC values could be used to set thresholds below which ground-checks of stand health would be warranted.

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