The Structural and Radiative Consistency of Three-Dimensional Tree Reconstructions from Terrestrial Lidar
A novel methodology is proposed to reconstruct 3D tree architectures from terrestrial LiDAR (TLiDAR) scans.
The methodology is robust and relatively insensitive to wind- and occlusion-induced artefacts in the 3D
TLiDAR point clouds. A quantitative evaluation of structural attributes, like the vertical foliage and wood area
profiles, as well as the shoot orientation distribution, was performed. Due to the difficulties of acquiring
reliable and accurate estimates of these parameters in the field, an original evaluation approach was chosen
that reproduces the TLiDAR scanning and subsequent tree reconstruction process in a virtual environment. In
a second step the reconstructed tree models were ingested in a validated 3D radiative transfer model to
simulate both their reflectance signatures (observable by space borne instruments) and directional
transmission properties (measurable during field campaigns) under various spectral, illumination and tree
density scenarios. The results of these evaluations confirm the appropriateness of the proposed tree
reconstruction model for the generation of structurally and radiatively faithful copies of existing plant and
canopy architectures.
COTE Jean-Francois;
WIDLOWSKI Jean-Luc;
FOURNIER Richard A.;
VERSTRAETE Michel;
2010-01-28
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
JRC56545
0034-4257,
www.elsevier.com/locate/rse,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC56545,
10.1016/j.rse.2009.01.017,
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