Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4458825 Remote Sensing of Environment 2015 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Wall-to-wall estimates of forest growing stock volume (GSV) north of 10°N•Spatial distribution of GSV well reproduced in four biomes•Percent error of ASAR-derived GSV averages at provincial level: between 12% and 45%.•Underestimation for areas with GSV > 300 m3/ha and in fragmented forest landscapes

This paper presents and assesses spatially explicit estimates of forest growing stock volume (GSV) of the northern hemisphere (north of 10°N) from hyper-temporal observations of Envisat Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) backscattered intensity using the BIOMASAR algorithm. Approximately 70,000 ASAR images at a pixel size of 0.01° were used to estimate GSV representative for the year 2010. The spatial distribution of the GSV across four ecological zones (polar, boreal, temperate, subtropical) was well captured by the ASAR-based estimates. The uncertainty of the retrieved GSV was smallest in boreal and temperate forest (< 30% for approximately 80% of the forest area) and largest in subtropical forest. ASAR-derived GSV averages at the level of administrative units were mostly in agreement with inventory-derived estimates. Underestimation occurred in regions of very high GSV (> 300 m3/ha) and fragmented forest landscapes. For the major forested countries within the study region, the relative RMSE between ASAR-derived GSV averages at provincial level and corresponding values from National Forest Inventory was between 12% and 45% (average: 29%).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Computers in Earth Sciences
Authors
, , , , , , , , , , , ,