Fayad Ibrahim, Baghdadi Nicolas, Guitet Stéphane, Bailly Jean Stéphane, Hérault Bruno, Gond Valéry, El Hajj Mahmoud, Tong Minh Dinh Ho. 2016. Aboveground biomass mapping in French Guiana by combining remote sensing, forest inventories and environmental data. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation, 52 : 502-514.
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Résumé : Mapping forest aboveground biomass (AGB) has become an important task, particularly for the reporting of carbon stocks and changes. AGB can be mapped using synthetic aperture radar data (SAR) or passive optical data. However, these data are insensitive to high AGB levels (>150 Mg/ha, and >300 Mg/ha for P-band), which are commonly found in tropical forests. Studies have mapped the rough variations in AGB by combining optical and environmental data at regional and global scales. Nevertheless, these maps cannot represent local variations in AGB in tropical forests. In this paper, we hypothesize that the problem of misrepresenting local variations in AGB and AGB estimation with good precision occurs because of both methodological limits (signal saturation or dilution bias) and a lack of adequate calibration data in this range of AGB values. We test this hypothesis by developing a calibrated regression model to predict variations in high AGB values (mean >300 Mg/ha) in French Guiana by a methodological approach for spatial extrapolation with data from the optical geoscience laser altimeter system (GLAS), forest inventories, radar, optics, and environmental variables for spatial inter- and extrapolation. Given their higher point count, GLAS data allow a wider coverage of AGB values. We find that the metrics from GLAS footprints are correlated with field AGB estimations (R2 = 0.54, RMSE = 48.3 Mg/ha) with no bias for high values. First, predictive models, including remote-sensing, environmental variables and spatial correlation functions, allow us to obtain “wall-to-wall” AGB maps over French Guiana with an RMSE for the in situ AGB estimates of ∼50 Mg/ha and R2 = 0.66 at a 1-km grid size. We conclude that a calibrated regression model based on GLAS with dependent environmental data can produce good AGB predictions even for high AGB values if the calibration data fit the AGB range. We also demonstrate that small temporal and spatial mismatches between field data and GLAS footprints are not a problem for regional and global calibrated regression models because field data aim to predict large and deep tendencies in AGB variations from environmental gradients and do not aim to represent high but stochastic and temporally limited variations from forest dynamics. Thus, we advocate including a greater variety of data, even if less precise and shifted, to better represent high AGB values in global models and to improve the fitting of these models for high values.
Mots-clés Agrovoc : forêt tropicale humide, biomasse, inventaire forestier, séquestration du carbone, cartographie, radar, méthode statistique, modèle de simulation, production forestière, dynamique des populations
Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Guyane française, France
Mots-clés libres : LiDAR, ICESat/GLAS, French Guiana, Forest, Aboveground biomass, Mapping
Classification Agris : K01 - Foresterie - Considérations générales
K10 - Production forestière
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
Champ stratégique Cirad : Axe 6 (2014-2018) - Sociétés, natures et territoires
Auteurs et affiliations
- Fayad Ibrahim, IRSTEA (FRA)
- Baghdadi Nicolas, IRSTEA (FRA)
- Guitet Stéphane, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR AMAP (FRA)
- Bailly Jean Stéphane, AgroParisTech (FRA)
- Hérault Bruno, CIRAD-ES-UMR Ecofog (GUF) ORCID: 0000-0002-6950-7286
- Gond Valéry, CIRAD-ES-UPR BSef (FRA) ORCID: 0000-0002-0080-3140
- El Hajj Mahmoud, NOVELTIS (FRA)
- Tong Minh Dinh Ho, IRSTEA (FRA)
Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/581363/)
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