Publication | Closed Access
Radar estimates of aboveground biomass in boreal forests of interior Alaska
160
Citations
20
References
1994
Year
Environmental MonitoringAirborne Sar DataEngineeringAboveground BiomassForestryForest ProductivityTerrestrial SensingEarth ScienceRadar EstimatesAtmospheric ScienceImaging RadarRadar IlluminationSynthetic Aperture RadarGeographyMicrowave Remote SensingRadar ApplicationInterior AlaskaDeforestationForest BiomassRadar ImagingRadarRemote SensingRadar Image ProcessingRadar ResponseForest Inventory
Airborne SAR data gathered by the NASA/JPL three-frequency, polarimetric, radar system in winter, spring, and summer over the Bonanza Creek Experimental Forest, near Fairbanks, AK, are compared to estimates of whole-tree aboveground dry biomass from 21 forest stands and two clear-cuts. While C-band radar backscatter shows little sensitivity to biomass, L- and P-band radar backscatter increase by more than 6 dB when biomass increases from 5 to 200 tons/ha. Using second-order polynomial regressions, biomass values are predicted from the radar at L- and P-band and compared to actual biomass values. At P-band HV-polarization, the error in predicted biomass is about 30% of the actual biomass. When HV-, HH-, and VV-polarization are used together in the regression, the error in predicted biomass is about 20%. Errors obtained using L-band data are a few percents larger. These errors are caused by uncertainties in actual stand biomass estimates, significant inner-stand spatial variations in biomass, unusual conditions of forest stands following natural disturbances, along with interactions of the radar signals with a complex three-dimensional structure of the canopy. Multiple incidence angle data reveal that the incidence angle /spl theta//sub i/ of the radar illumination is also a factor influencing the retrieval of biomass, even at HV-polarization, when /spl theta//sub i/>50/spl deg/ or /spl theta//sub i/<25/spl deg/. Finally, the radar response of the forest-and thereby the regression curves for biomass retrieval-are dependent on the seasonal and environmental conditions.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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