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Entries in snamp (31)

Wednesday
Mar302011

SNAMP spatial newsletter on lidar

This is an exerpt from an older SNAMP newsletter Marek and I wrote describing the use of lidar in our Sierra Nevada Adaptive Management Project. Originally published November 2008.

Environmental sciences are inherently spatial, and geospatial tools such as Geographical Information Systems (GIS), Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and remote sensing are fundamental to these research enterprises.  Remote sensing has been used for forest and habitat mapping for a long time, and new technological developments such as LIDAR (light detection and ranging) are making this field even more exciting.  Here we briefly describe LIDAR’s basic principles and show some preliminary analyses completed for the SNAMP Project. We are using this data to model detailed topography to help the water team understand runoff in the SNAMP watersheds, to map forest canopy cover and vegetation height as inputs to the fire and forest health team’s detailed fire models, and to derive important forest habitat characteristics for the spotted owl and fisher teams.

We contracted with the National Center for Airborne LIDAR Mapping (NCALM) for our data.  They flew the GEMINI instrument at approximately 600 m above ground level, with 67% swath overlap. The instrument collected 4 discrete returns per pulse at 125kHz, and the data has a final
density of 9 points per m2.

Raw Data: LIDAR data is typically delivered as a “point cloud,” a collection of elevations and their intensities that can be projected in a three-dimensional space. In Figure 2 (right) we show this “point cloud” concept. There are thousands of individual points in the image, each colored according to its height (magenta and red are high, orange and yellow are low). 

Bare Earth: Once the data is collected, the first step is to transform the data into a “bare earth” model; which is an approximation of the ground if all objects above surface are removed.  We use the “Last Return” data (see Figure 1 above) to generate this model of the bare earth.  These are typically very detailed products (with a small footprint on the ground) and provide much more topographic information than from Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) that were derived from topographic maps.  Our DEM has a ground resolution of under 1m.

Forest Structure: Another typical step in processing LIDAR data is to examine individual trees and forest structure.  An example of a forest stand is shown in Figure 4.  These and other products help us understand how the forest influences surface hydrology, how a patch of forest might provide habitat for a fisher and how a forest might burn given certain weather and wind patterns.  

Future Analyses: We are in the process of linking the forest parameters gathered by the Fire & Forest Ecosystem Health Team in summer 2008 with the LIDAR-derived data to help scale-up forest variables to the fireshed scale.  For example, tree height, tree DBH (diameter-at- breast-height) and canopy cover have been successfully modeled using LIDAR data in other studies, and there is active research linking field-based and LIDAR-based fire-related measures such as canopy base height and ladder fuels, and wildlife-related measures such as vertical structure. 

Friday
Jul242009

Indigenous mapping network at UC Berkeley

Our friends from DataBasin are on campus on Monday. Kai Henifin is a Cultural Ecologist/GIS Analyst with the non-profit organization Conservation Biology Institute, the developers of DataBasin. Kai will be speaking about "Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge to Improve Conservation through Data Sharing" as part of the Berkeley Indigenous Mapping Network. For more info on the event.

We have some interesting cross-overs with CBI and DataBasin: we added our SOD data to DataBasin recently (see image at left); and CBI have a nice modeling project looking at fisher in the southern Sierra that Reg and Rick are using in their SNAMP work.

Saturday
May302009

Lidar web resources

As a lead-up to this week's SNAMP Spatial Team Workshops on our LiDAR data, I am collecting the great web resources for LiDAR here.

Thursday
May282009

Lidar and owls

Related to our SNAMP work, and the research Celia is doing here: this NASA highlight article featuring Ralph Dubayah's Sierra forest work. Must follow up on this.

Friday
Jun272008

Watching closely


Watching closely, originally uploaded by SNAMP Photo Collector.

Marek found this fellow watching him on the way home from field work.

Wednesday
Jun252008

So smoky here

You know why: All the burning in Northern California is shown via the NASA hazards site. I haven't seen any perimeter maps yet.

Wednesday
May142008

SNAMP news

  Appeals court stops feds plan to log Sierra Nevada forest - The Associated Press /Published 11:37 am PDT Wednesday, May 14, 2008/ A federal appeals court has barred logging in the Sierra Nevada forest. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals says the federal government failed to explore other ways to raise money to fight forest fires when it approved a plan to award timber contracts to cut down trees on three sites. The Forest Service says the logging of commercially valuable trees is needed to help pay for thinning of less desirable smaller trees and brush. Environmental groups say the logging plan fails to protect scarce species such as the California spotted owl, martin and Pacific fisher. Attorney General Jerry Brown joined the environmental groups in appealing a lower court decision last year that authorized the government to allow the timber contracts. We'll keep you posted.

Wednesday
Apr302008

Daylight Fisher!

Daylight Fisher!, originally uploaded by SNAMP Photo Collector.

Check out this cutie. A fisher from the SNAMP project. Marek was flying over this guy last week.

Friday
Oct192007

Spotted Owl in the news.

Spotted Owl in the news. I noticed this on the front page of the NYTimes webpage. (SNAMP)

Friday
Sep282007

Overlooking the southern site

Another lovely view of the SNAMP site - this one in the south