Characterizing the Multi-scale Post-fire Forest Structural Change in North American Boreal Forests using Air- and Space-borne Lidar Observations

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Files

Feng_umd_0117E_24229.pdf (5.26 MB)
(RESTRICTED ACCESS)
No. of downloads:

Publication or External Link

Date

2024

Citation

Abstract

Wildfire is the dominant stand-replacing disturbance regime in boreal North America, shaping the pattern, structure and composition of forested landscapes. Forest losses and gains through wildfires are two linked ecological processes, despite their varied functionalities in terrestrial carbon budgets. Combustion of forest biomass through wildfires results in the release of terrestrial carbon, whereas subsequent forest recovery process would re-sequestrate atmospheric CO2 back to the plants, and therefore at least partially offsets fire-induced carbon emissions. However, the magnitude of forest carbon fluxes and its association with wildfires is highly uncertain, especially under the context of large anomalies in fire regimes during the past few decades due to climate change. To fill the knowledge gaps, this dissertation focuses on integrations of air- and space-borne Light Detection and Ranging (lidar) to assess the magnitudes of forest structure and Aboveground Biomass Density (AGBD) changes with respect to wildfires. This dissertation starts with a systematic evaluation of multi-resolution Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite -2 (ICESat-2) terrain and canopy height estimates over boreal North America. As one of the first ICESat-2 validation studies, this work demonstrates ICESat-2 as a suitable platform for large-scale terrain and canopy height measurements, and further provides a suite of standards for ICESat-2 data filtering over boreal forests. Thereafter, I analyze magnitude of forest structure and AGBD changes through wildfire events with multi-temporal airborne lidar and Landsat. This study establishes quantitative linkages between multispectral and structural measurements of fire effects on forest damage, and further reveals burn severity levels, pre-fire forest structure and fire-return intervals as dominant drivers for the magnitude of forest damage through fires. Finally, this dissertation investigates continental-scale forest recovery rate through a full-collection of high-resolution ICESat-2 observations, Landsat-based disturbance history and multi-decadal climatology records. The forest recovery rates under different warming trend are found to be converging over the past few decades, demonstrated as the growth rate of forests across high-latitudinal North gradually approaching their counterparts over Southern boreal zones. This work further reveals a positive effect of growing season warming on forest deciduousness shift, and concludes that regions with warming and associated increase in deciduous compositions would experience greatest growth rate acceleration. This dissertation leverages the potential of multi-sourced remote sensing datasets to assess spatial extents, magnitudes, and underlying drivers of forest carbon feedbacks to climate change and wildfires over North American boreal ecosystem.

Notes

Rights