Assessment of Forest Above-Ground Biomass Estimation from PolInSAR in the Presence of Temporal Decorrelation

  • Nafiseh Ghasemi (Creator)

Dataset

Description

We explored the possibility of modifying tree height estimation model and included temporal decorrelation component. It increased the accuracy of height estimation by an average of 30%. Assessment of Forest Above-Ground Biomass Estimation from PolInSAR in the Presence of Temporal Decorrelation Ghasemi, N., Tolpekin, V. A. & Stein, A., 24 May 2018, In : Remote sensing. 10, 6, 21 p., 815. https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/6/815 In forestry studies, remote sensing has been widely used to monitor deforestation and estimate biomass, and it has contributed to forest carbon stock management. A major problem when estimating biomass from optical and SAR remote sensing images is the saturation effect. As a solution, PolInSAR offers a high coverage height map that can be transformed into a biomass map. Temporal decorrelation may affect the accuracy of PolInSAR and may also have an effect on the accuracy of the biomass estimates. In this study, we compared three different height estimation models: the Random-Volume-over-Ground (RVoG), Random-Motion-over-Ground (RMoG), and Random-Motion-over-Ground-Legendre (RMoG L ) models. The RVoG model does not take into account the temporal decorrelation, while the other two compensate for temporal decorrelation but differ in structure function. The comparison was done on 214 field plots of the 10 m radius of the BioSAR2010 campaign. Different models relating PolInSAR height and biomass were developed by using polynomial, exponential, power series, and piece-wise linear regression. Different strategies for training and test subset selection were followed to obtain the best possible regression models. The study showed that the RMoG L model provided the most accurate biomass predictions. The relation between RMoG L height and biomass is well expressed by the exponential model with an average RMSE equal to 48 ton ha −1 and R 2 value equal to 0.62. The relative errors for estimated biomass were equal to 46% for the RVoG model, to 37% for the RMoG, and to 30% for the RMoG L model. We concluded that taking the temporal decorrelation into account for estimating tree height has a significant effect on providing accurate biomass estimates
Date made available2 Dec 2019
PublisherDATA Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
Date of data production30 Sept 2018

Cite this