Publication | Open Access
Canopy Effects on Snow Accumulation: Observations from Lidar, Canonical-View Photos, and Continuous Ground Measurements from Sensor Networks
21
Citations
42
References
2018
Year
Earth ObservationEnvironmental MonitoringEngineeringForest BiometricsSnow AccumulationForestryCanopy MicrometeorologyTerrestrial SensingEarth ScienceCanonical-view PhotosAtmospheric ScienceCanopy EffectsForest MeteorologyClimate ChangeMeteorologyGeographyClimatologyCanopy MetricsSnow Accumulation VariabilityRemote SensingForest InventorySnow Avalanche
A variety of canopy metrics were extracted from the snow-off airborne light detection and ranging (lidar) measurements over three study areas in the central and southern Sierra Nevada. Two of the sites, Providence and Wolverton, had wireless snow-depth sensors since 2008, with the third site, Pinecrest having sensors since 2014. At Wolverton and Pinecrest, images were captured and the sky-view factors were derived from hemispherical-view photos. We found the variation of snow accumulation across the landscape to be significantly related to canopy-cover conditions. Using a regularized regression model Elastic Net to model the normalized snow accumulation with canopy metrics as independent variables, we found that about 50 % of snow accumulation variability at each site can be explained by the canopy metrics from lidar.
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