ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
Download
Publications Copernicus
Download
Citation
Articles | Volume III-3
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-III-3-233-2016
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-annals-III-3-233-2016
03 Jun 2016
 | 03 Jun 2016

ULS LiDAR SUPPORTED ANALYSES OF LASER BEAM PENETRATION FROM DIFFERENT ALS SYSTEMS INTO VEGETATION

M. Wieser, M. Hollaus, G. Mandlburger, P. Glira, and N. Pfeifer

Keywords: tree height, ALB, underestimation, vegetation height, penetration, canopy

Abstract. This study analyses the underestimation of tree and shrub heights for different airborne laser scanner systems and point cloud distribution within the vegetation column. Reference data was produced by a novel UAV-borne laser scanning (ULS) with a high point density in the complete vegetation column. With its physical parameters (e.g. footprint) and its relative accuracy within the block as stated in Section 2.2 the reference data is supposed to be highly suitable to detect the highest point of the vegetation. An airborne topographic (ALS) and topo-bathymetric (ALB) system were investigated. All data was collected in a period of one month in leaf-off condition, while the dominant tree species in the study area are deciduous trees. By robustly estimating the highest 3d vegetation point of each laser system the underestimation of the vegetation height was examined in respect to the ULS reference data. This resulted in a higher under-estimation of the airborne topographic system with 0.60 m (trees) and 0.55 m (shrubs) than for the topo-bathymetric system 0.30 m (trees) and 0.40 m (shrubs). The degree of the underestimation depends on structural characteristics of the vegetation itself and physical specification of the laser system.