Conference Agenda
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Please note that all times are shown in CEST. The current conference time is: 13th Dec 2021, 09:44:05am CET
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Session Overview |
Session | ||||
Dr5 S.5.1: ECOSYSTEMS
ID. 59257 Data Fusion 4 Forests Assessement | ||||
Presentations | ||||
10:45am - 11:05am
Accepted ID: 260 / Dr5 S.5.1: 1 Oral Presentation for Dragon 5 Ecosystem: 59257 - Mapping Forest Parameters and Forest Damage For Sustainable Forest Management From Data Fusion of Satellite Data Mapping Forest Parameters and Forest Damage for Sustainable Forest Management From Data Fusion of Satellite Data 1Beijing Forestry University, China; 2Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Resource Management, SWEDEN; 3Chinese Academy of Agriculture Sciences, China ID.59257: Mapping forest parameters and forest damage for sustainable forest management from data fusion of satellite data PI Europe: Dr. Johan Fransson, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Resource Management, SWEDEN PI China: Prof. Xiaoli Zhang, Beijing Forestry University, CHINA Forests play a critical role in the Earth’s ecosystem and have a strong impact on the environment. Under the threat of global climate change, remote sensing techniques provide information for a better understanding of the forest ecosystems, early detection of forest diseases, and both rapid and continuous monitoring of forest disasters. This project concerns the topic Ecosystems and spans the subtopics Collaborative estimation of forest quality parameters and Forest and grassland disaster monitoring. The aim is to study and explore remote sensing techniques in forest applications, especially on data fusion of satellite images, laser scanning, and hyperspectral drone images. The research contents are mainly tree species classification, forest parameter estimation and forest insect damage detection. 1. Work carried out during the current year: (1) Satellite images: We applied for and acquired ESA, Copernicus Sentinel and Chinese EO data, such as RADARSAT-2, SPOT, WorldView, Sentinel and Gaofen series, combined with hyperspectral data of UAV and LiDAR data to carry out relevant research. The satellite images acquired for the study area in China are: RADARSAT-2, two scenes altogether. One scene data covers Fushun County, one scene covers Qingyuan County.
The satellite images acquired for the study area in Sweden are:
(2) Survey data:
(3) Technical progress:
For D. tabulaeformis, we proposed a spectral-spatial classification framework combining UAV-based hyperspectral images and digital images to achieve more detailed classification and automatically extract damaged tree crowns. For Bursaphelenchus xylophilus, we analyzed the spectral characteristics of three tree species (Pinus tabulaeformis, Pinus koraiensis and Pinus tabulaeformis) in Weihai, Shandong Province and Fushun, Liaoning Province during different susceptible stages, and explored the spectral response characteristics of plants under stress. For spruce bark beetles, we have been developing algorithms to detect infestations using Sentinel-2 images in 2018 and 2019. 2.Plan for next year (1) Data acquisition: We would like to apply for TanDEM data covering Wangyedian and Weihai, as well as WorldView-3 data covering Wangyedian, Anhui and Fushun. We have ordered one WorldView-2 image and one WorldView-3 image covering Remningstorp in May 2021. We will also acquire one more RADARSAT-2 image in September, and one or two RADARSAT-2 images in the winter 2021-2022. (2) The research content:
(3) Cooperation plan: Our two teams share similar interests in forest remote sensing, conduct similar projects to communicate and collaborate more in scientific research. Annual seminars are planned in 2021 to 2024. The two team will collaborate in joint studies and publications. Niwen Li, a PhD student in BFU, will have a research exchange to SLU from August 2021 to July 2022. And more exchange of PhD students is under consideration. The scientific communication will be conducted every month by the researchers.
11:05am - 11:25am
Accepted ID: 324 / Dr5 S.5.1: 2 Oral Presentation for Dragon 5 Ecosystem: 59307 - 3-D Characterization and Temporal Analysis of Forests and Vegetated Areas Using Time-Series of Polarimetric SAR Data and Tomographic Processing Assessment Of The Performance of Polarimetric And Tomographic SAR Configurations For The Characterization of Tropical Forests 1University of Rennes 1, France; 2Cesbio, France; 3IFRIT, Chines Academy of Forestry, Beijing, China The European Space Agency (ESA) will launch in 2023 the BIOMASS spaceborne mission, based on a SAR device operating over several polarizations at P band, and whose main objective is the characterization of dense forests. One of the original features of this mission concerns its ability to provide 3-D SAR information through polarimetric and tomographic SAR (PolTomoSAR) data processing. The whole mission lifetime will be split into two phases: during the first phase (15 months) stacks of 7 coherent images will be acquired over all forested areas, whereas during the second phase (4 years), data will be measured in dual-baseline Polarimetric SAR Interferometry (PolInSAR) configuration, with 3 images every 7 months. This contribution proposes to compare the performance of the different observations modes of the future BIOMASS mission for the characterization of tropical forests, and to evaluate the gain in performance conferred by a synergistic combination of the two phases of the sensor’s life and by the use external information, such Lidar acquisitions etc. In particular, it provides indicators of variability for different typical descriptors of the SAR response of a forest, and tests several scenari for the fusion of multi-source information using SAR images acquired at P band in the frame of the TropiSAR campaign and auxiliary data.
11:25am - 11:45am
Accepted ID: 331 / Dr5 S.5.1: 3 Oral Presentation for Dragon 5 Ecosystem: 59358 - CEFO: China-Esa Forest Observation 1st Year Progress of CEFO Project (China-ESA Forest Observation) 1Chinese Academy of Forestry, China, People's Republic of; 2Department of Geography, Swansea University, Swansea SA2 8PP, UK; 3Forest Research, Northern Research Station, Roslin, Midlothian EH25 9SY, Scotland, UK This joint project combines the use of field and airborne remote sensing data to validate and calibrate innovative new satellite sensors from CNAS, ESA and NASA for forest inventory, assessment and monitoring applications in China and the UK. The Pu’er airborne remote sensing experiment was conducted in December 2020, which covered a subtropical forest area near the city of Pu’er in the Yunnan province of China. The multi-sensor airborne remote sensing data covered 900 km2 area were acquired using two Chinese Academy of Forestry’s Airborne Observation Systems (CAF-AOS). The LiDAR point cloud has an average footprint density of 2.3 pts/m2. The hyperspectral image has a spatial resolution of 2 m and 125 bands with the spectral range spanning from 400 to 990 nm. The spatial resolution of CCD image is 0.5 m. The spatial resolution of the middle-wave infrared image and long-wave infrared image is 1.87 m and 0.85 m, respectively. Moreover, 100 forest plots, and other ground measurements such as land-use/land-cover (LULC) ground truth points, Leaf Area Index (LAI), soil moisture, and chlorophyll content were conducted during that time. These high quality airborne and ground observed data provide a great support for the validation of high resolution satellite remote sensing products. Field data, ground based structural surveys and UAV remote sensing campaigns took place at the Aberfoyle Research Forest, Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park, Scotland, during October – November 2019. More field data collection is planned in this area for the summer of 2021. The majority of this site comprises conifer plantations with a predominance of Sitka spruce (60%), Scots pine, Japanese larch and Norway spruce. Additionally, there are some stands of native broadleaf species. Monitoring plots for yield assessment and windthrow risk modelling were surveyed using a handheld laser scanner, enabling the beneath canopy structure and density to be recorded. Sites were overflown with UAV RGB sensors, enabling a 3D reconstruction of the canopy using structure from motion (SfM) analysis. The Research Forest was additionally flown using airborne LiDAR during April 2021, updating a sequence of previous data captured during 2002, 2006, and 2012. All the areas covered in the field and by airborne methods constitute a set of fiducial sites for the constant calibration and validation of satellite imagery. The main goals of the Scottish experiments are the creation of superior and more intensive forest inventory products, improved growth models and a more accurate production forecast system. The airborne hyperspectral images at meter-scale spatial resolution, and centimetre resolution from UAV multispectral data, provide the capability to describe the canopy structure and monitor the physiological conditions through some narrow bands spectrum, which has great potential for forest health monitoring, forest type/tree species classification. The reflectance from airborne hyperspectral images was firstly compared with the satellite remote sensing products from Gaofen-1/2/6 and sentinel-2. Then, the forest type/tree species was classified based on the composite Sentinel-2 image with 10/20 m spatial resolution on Google Earth Engine (GEE). An automated training dataset was built based on several published land cover products. Finally, forest type/tree species classification results are generated using random forest classifier. The final forest type/tree species classification results will be evaluated using the LULC ground truth data and plots information for further analysis. The airborne LiDAR data and UAV SfM data were used to evaluate the performances of forest vertical parameters estimation algorithms using Gaofen-7, GEDI and ICESat-2 data. Both terrain and forest parameters will be analyzed.
11:45am - 12:05pm
Accepted ID: 263 / Dr5 S.5.1: 4 Oral Presentation for Dragon 5 Ecosystem: 59313 - Grassland Degradation Detection and Assessment by RS Grassland Degradation Detection and Assessment by Remotre Sensing (59313) 1Institute of Forest Resource Information Techniques, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China; 2Key Laboratory of Forestry Remote Sensing and Information System, NFGA, Beijing 100094, China; 3Key Laboratory of Digital Earth Science, Aerospace Information Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100094, China; 4School of Geography ,University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK As grassland is the largest terrestrial ecosystem in China, as well as the sources of many major rivers and key areas of water and soil conservation, it plays an irreplaceable role in ensuring national scale ecological security and promoting ecological civilization construction. However, as an important ecological resource, grassland ecosystem in China has been greatly degrading caused by climate change, overgrazing and other human activities. Therefore, grassland degradation monitoring and assessment have become an extremely urgent work for grassland ecological conservation and restoration of degraded grassland. Some remote sensing mapping methods of grassland types and remote sensing inversion of grassland biomass at regional scale have been put forward in previous studies, but most of them have poor universality and may not meet the needs of grassland dynamic and accurate monitoring. In Dragon 5 project 59313, we did some scientific studies based on the geomatics methods on remotely sensed data from both European and Chinese side and other geospatial databases. In the first year of Dragon 5, joint research results have been achieved in the following two aspects: (1) Fully employing the potential of time series sentinel-1 and sentinel-2 of ESA and the observation data of grassland shrubbery sample were used as the data sources. The shrub coverage of Xilingol grassland was estimated by correlation analysis and random forest model methods. It is of great significance for the sustainable utilization and management of grassland and the response analysis of climate change to grasp the information of large-scale grassland shrub accurately. (2) Soil organic carbon (SOC) and soil total nitrogen (STN) are important indicators of soil quality. On the Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud computing platform, we choose three machine learning methods: random forest (RF), support vector machine (SVM) and Multi-layer perceptron neural networks (MLP Neural Nets) models. Using Sentinel-2 of ESA, topographic factors and climatic factors carry out 30-meter resolution high-precision mapping of the 0-20cm SOC and STN content of the soil surface of grassland. High-resolution SOC and STN digital maps are of great significance for soil quality assessment and land degradation monitoring.
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