

Author: Joshi Neha P. Mitchard Edward T. A. Schumacher Johannes Johannsen Vivian K. Saatchi Sassan Fensholt Rasmus
Publisher: MDPI
E-ISSN: 2072-4292|7|4|4442-4472
ISSN: 2072-4292
Source: Remote Sensing, Vol.7, Iss.4, 2015-04, pp. : 4442-4472
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Abstract
Mapping forest aboveground biomass (AGB) using satellite data is an important task, particularly for reporting of carbon stocks and changes under climate change legislation. It is known that AGB can be mapped using synthetic aperture radar (SAR), but relationships between AGB and radar backscatter may be confounded by variations in biophysical forest structure (density, height or cover fraction) and differences in the resolution of satellite and ground data. Here, we attempt to quantify the effect of these factors by relating L-band ALOS PALSAR HV backscatter and unique country-wide LiDAR-derived maps of vegetation penetrability, height and AGB over Denmark at different spatial scales (50 m to 500 m). Trends in the relations indicate that, first, AGB retrieval accuracy from SAR improves most in mapping at 100-m scale instead of 50 m, and improvements are negligible beyond 250 m. Relative errors (bias and root mean squared error) decrease particularly for high AGB values (>110 Mg ha−1) at coarse scales, and hence, coarse-scale mapping (≥150 m) may be most suited for areas with high AGB. Second, SAR backscatter and a LiDAR-derived measure of fractional forest cover were found to have a strong linear relation (
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