College of Behavioral & Social Sciences

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    Integration of VIIRS Observations with GEDI-Lidar Measurements to Monitor Forest Structure Dynamics from 2013 to 2020 across the Conterminous United States
    (MDPI, 2022-05-11) Rishmawi, Khaldoun; Huang, Chengquan; Schleeweis, Karen; Zhan, Xiwu
    Consistent and spatially explicit periodic monitoring of forest structure is essential for estimating forest-related carbon emissions, analyzing forest degradation, and supporting sustainable forest management policies. To date, few products are available that allow for continental to global operational monitoring of changes in canopy structure. In this study, we explored the synergy between the NASA’s spaceborne Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) waveform LiDAR and the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) data to produce spatially explicit and consistent annual maps of canopy height (CH), percent canopy cover (PCC), plant area index (PAI), and foliage height diversity (FHD) across the conterminous United States (CONUS) at a 1-km resolution for 2013–2020. The accuracies of the annual maps were assessed using forest structure attribute derived from airborne laser scanning (ALS) data acquired between 2013 and 2020 for the 48 National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) field sites distributed across the CONUS. The root mean square error (RMSE) values of the annual canopy height maps as compared with the ALS reference data varied from a minimum of 3.31-m for 2020 to a maximum of 4.19-m for 2017. Similarly, the RMSE values for PCC ranged between 8% (2020) and 11% (all other years). Qualitative evaluations of the annual maps using time series of very high-resolution images further suggested that the VIIRS-derived products could capture both large and “more” subtle changes in forest structure associated with partial harvesting, wind damage, wildfires, and other environmental stresses. The methods developed in this study are expected to enable multi-decadal analysis of forest structure and its dynamics using consistent satellite observations from moderate resolution sensors such as VIIRS onboard JPSS satellites.
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    TOWARDS A BETTTER UNDERSTANDING OF FOREST CHANGE PROCESSES IN THE CONTIGUOUS U.S.
    (2012) Schleeweis, Karen; Goward, Samuel N.; Geography; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Estimates of forest canopy areal extent, configuration and change have been developed from satellite based imagery and ground based inventories to improve understanding of forest dynamics and how they interact with other earth systems across many scales. The number of these types of studies has grown in recent years. Yet, few have assessed the multiple change processes underlying observed forest canopy dynamics across large spatio-temporal extents. To support these types of assessments, a more detailed and integrated understanding of the geographic patterns of the multiple forest change processes across the contiguous US (CONUS) is needed. This study examined a novel data set from the North American Forest dynamics (NAFD) project that provides a dense temporal record (1984-2005) of forest canopy history across the U.S., United States Forest Service (USFS) ground inventory data, and ancillary geospatial data sets on forest change processes (wind, insect, fire, harvest and conversion to suburban/urban land uses) across the CONUS to develop a more robust understanding of the implications of the shifting dynamics of forest change processes and our ability to measure their effect on forest canopy dynamics. A geodatabase of forest change processes was created to support synoptic and specific quantitative analysis of change processes support through space and time. Using the geodatabase, patterns of forest canopy losses from NAFD and USFS data and the underlying causal process were analyzed across multiple scales. This research has shown that the overlap of multiple disturbance processes leads to complex patterns across the nation's forested landscape that can only be fully understood in relation to forest canopy losses at fine scales. Regional statistics confounded the direction and magnitude of forest canopy loss from multiple change processes operating on the landscape. Data gaps and uncertainty associated with process data prevent a full quantitative analysis of the proportion of forest area affected by each forest change process considered here. Fine scale data were critical for interpreting the highly variable NAFD canopy change observations and their ability to capture the continuously changing spatial and temporal characteristics of forest change processes across the CONUS.