Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography

Abstract Due to their importance for climate change monitoring, modelling and adaptation, vegetation structural properties including leaf area index (LAI) are designated essential climate variables (ECVs) by the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS). Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), which rapidly...

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Main Authors: Luke A. Brown, Israa Kadhim, F. Mark Danson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-07-01
Series:Methods in Ecology and Evolution
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.70060
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author Luke A. Brown
Israa Kadhim
F. Mark Danson
author_facet Luke A. Brown
Israa Kadhim
F. Mark Danson
author_sort Luke A. Brown
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Due to their importance for climate change monitoring, modelling and adaptation, vegetation structural properties including leaf area index (LAI) are designated essential climate variables (ECVs) by the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS). Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), which rapidly acquires millions of three‐dimensional point measurements representing the physical environment, is an increasingly popular method for estimating these ECVs. To assess LAI from TLS data collected during leaf‐on conditions, a fundamental requirement is the classification of points as either leaves or wood. Existing intensity‐based leaf‐wood classification methods are confounded by natural variability in the reflectance of leaves and wood, bidirectional reflectance effects and the need for complex radiometric calibration, whilst geometric methods require high point density and are known to misclassify small branches and twigs. A novel leaf‐wood classification approach is presented that avoids these issues by exploiting the spectral transmittance properties of leaves and wood, which, at near‐infrared wavelengths, demonstrate much larger differences than for reflectance. The approach relies on classification of near‐infrared images collected by a co‐registered camera integrated with the TLS instrument and can be directly applied to the whole point cloud without segmentation. The technique is applied for leaf‐on estimation of LAI and wood area index (WAI) at a deciduous broadleaf forest site, and results are benchmarked against reference values derived from leaf‐off scans. Leaf‐on estimates of LAI and WAI demonstrated a small bias (RMSD ≤0.46, bias ≤0.17) but were not significantly different from reference values at the site level. The results provide evidence of the efficacy of the approach, and its use has the potential to reduce uncertainty in ECVs critical to climate change monitoring, modelling and adaptation.
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spelling doaj-art-c20c02152dd64036aa3d39b3c8df96252025-07-02T06:42:32ZengWileyMethods in Ecology and Evolution2041-210X2025-07-011671425143610.1111/2041-210X.70060Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photographyLuke A. Brown0Israa Kadhim1F. Mark Danson2School of Science, Engineering & Environment University of Salford Manchester UKSchool of Science, Engineering & Environment University of Salford Manchester UKSchool of Science, Engineering & Environment University of Salford Manchester UKAbstract Due to their importance for climate change monitoring, modelling and adaptation, vegetation structural properties including leaf area index (LAI) are designated essential climate variables (ECVs) by the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS). Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), which rapidly acquires millions of three‐dimensional point measurements representing the physical environment, is an increasingly popular method for estimating these ECVs. To assess LAI from TLS data collected during leaf‐on conditions, a fundamental requirement is the classification of points as either leaves or wood. Existing intensity‐based leaf‐wood classification methods are confounded by natural variability in the reflectance of leaves and wood, bidirectional reflectance effects and the need for complex radiometric calibration, whilst geometric methods require high point density and are known to misclassify small branches and twigs. A novel leaf‐wood classification approach is presented that avoids these issues by exploiting the spectral transmittance properties of leaves and wood, which, at near‐infrared wavelengths, demonstrate much larger differences than for reflectance. The approach relies on classification of near‐infrared images collected by a co‐registered camera integrated with the TLS instrument and can be directly applied to the whole point cloud without segmentation. The technique is applied for leaf‐on estimation of LAI and wood area index (WAI) at a deciduous broadleaf forest site, and results are benchmarked against reference values derived from leaf‐off scans. Leaf‐on estimates of LAI and WAI demonstrated a small bias (RMSD ≤0.46, bias ≤0.17) but were not significantly different from reference values at the site level. The results provide evidence of the efficacy of the approach, and its use has the potential to reduce uncertainty in ECVs critical to climate change monitoring, modelling and adaptation.https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.70060leaf area index (LAI)light detection and ranging (LiDAR)near‐infrared (NIR)plant area index (PAI)terrestrial laser scanning (TLS)wood area index (WAI)
spellingShingle Luke A. Brown
Israa Kadhim
F. Mark Danson
Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
Methods in Ecology and Evolution
leaf area index (LAI)
light detection and ranging (LiDAR)
near‐infrared (NIR)
plant area index (PAI)
terrestrial laser scanning (TLS)
wood area index (WAI)
title Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
title_full Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
title_fullStr Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
title_full_unstemmed Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
title_short Leaf‐wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co‐registered near‐infrared photography
title_sort leaf wood classification of terrestrial laser scanning data with co registered near infrared photography
topic leaf area index (LAI)
light detection and ranging (LiDAR)
near‐infrared (NIR)
plant area index (PAI)
terrestrial laser scanning (TLS)
wood area index (WAI)
url https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.70060
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AT israakadhim leafwoodclassificationofterrestriallaserscanningdatawithcoregisterednearinfraredphotography
AT fmarkdanson leafwoodclassificationofterrestriallaserscanningdatawithcoregisterednearinfraredphotography