1 / 45

Digital Data Sources For Family Forests Paul Gessler Remote Sensing & GIS Research Laboratory College of Natural Re

Digital Data Sources For Family Forests Paul Gessler Remote Sensing & GIS Research Laboratory College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho www.cnr.uidaho.edu/remotesensing. Talk Outline:

liam
Télécharger la présentation

Digital Data Sources For Family Forests Paul Gessler Remote Sensing & GIS Research Laboratory College of Natural Re

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digital Data Sources For Family Forests Paul Gessler Remote Sensing & GIS Research Laboratory College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho www.cnr.uidaho.edu/remotesensing

  2. Talk Outline: • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)1. Definitions, tools 2. Software packages 3. Digital data sources 4. Training courses • Global Positioning Systems (GPS)(generating your own digital data) • Images – Aerial and Satellite, LIDAR (purchasing cooperatives) • Web-based Mapping and Data Management

  3. Talk Outline: • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)1. Definitions, tools 2. Software packages 3. Digital data sources 4. Training courses • Global Positioning Systems (GPS)(generating your own digital data) • Images – Aerial and Satellite, LIDAR (purchasing cooperatives) • Web-based Mapping and Data Management

  4. A Geographic Information System (GIS) is defined as: A system for capturing, storing, checking, integrating, manipulating, analyzing, and displaying data which are spatially referenced to the Earth. Computer & software

  5. Why Use GIS? • Improve organizational integration • Make better decisions, analyze landscape trends & patterns • Make maps • GIS tools provide the “big picture” about the resources under your care and assist you in developing long-term supply strategies, forecasting silvicultural stock, determining harvesting system options, where to plant certain species for optimal returns etc.

  6. Landscape Structure Georeferenced 3-D Visualization

  7. Rick LovellSpatialTec

  8. Where to start? • Basic hardware, software: $1350 - $10,000 • Expertise training: short courses • Private Contractors: provide hardcopy maps, digital data, Internet Map Services (IMS) • www.mines.uidaho.edu/geography/ - UI GIS Certificate Program • www.gis.com – ESRI (Arc/Info, ArcGIS, ArcView…) • www.consulting-foresters.com - Northwest Management, private company • www.digitalgrove.net - Private site with lots of useful resources • www.digitshare.org - Sentry Dynamics, private company located at UI Research Park in Post Falls • www.cnr.uidaho.edu/rsgis/education.htm - UI College of Natural Resources • www.cnr.uidaho.edu/remotesensing - UI Remote Sensing & GIS Research Lab

  9. Software Packages – many!

  10. Where to get data? Many places: local, state, federal government agencies, Universities… inside.idaho.edu wagda.lib.washington.edu/ www.ecy.wa.gov/services/gis/data/data.htm www.wsdot.wa.gov/mapsdata/geodatacatalog/default.htm www.dnr.wa.gov/dataandmaps/

  11. Talk Outline: • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)1. Definitions, tools 2. Software packages 3. Digital data sources 4. Training courses • Global Positioning Systems (GPS)(generating your own digital data) • Images – Aerial and Satellite, LIDAR (purchasing cooperatives) • Web-based Mapping and Data Management

  12. GPS - Global Positioning Systems $20 billion US Taxpayer Investment

  13. GPS Equipment - Receivers Price range: $150 - $25,000 GPS Equipment - Antennas Mounted on a roof, a pole, a truck, or a person.

  14. GPS references www.trimble.com www.aero.org/publications/GPSPRIMER/ www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/notes/gps/gps_f.html

  15. Laser Rangefinders • Distance and Height Measurement • GPS Offset Mapping & GIS Data Capture (many units interface directly with GPS through built-in RS232 interfaces) • Timber Cruising • GIS data capture • Wildlife locations Wireless integration w/GPS & use with data dictionaries

  16. Basic Features to look for: • Level of accuracy required: differential corrections needed? • Integrated beacon: FM, or Omnistar… • Integrated WAAS/EGNOS/GLONASS capability • Data storage capacity, logging (RTCM, NMEA) • Multipath rejection – Everest • Data dictionaries • Wireless integration • Weight, battery life, vehicle kit

  17. Talk Outline: • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)1. Definitions, tools 2. Software packages 3. Digital data sources 4. Training courses • Global Positioning Systems (GPS)(generating your own digital data) • Images – Aerial and Satellite, LIDAR (purchasing cooperatives) • Web-based Mapping and Data Management

  18. Traditional film-based aerial image capture will shortly become a historical technology – replaced by digital cameras Reasons: resolution, digital format convenience, inexpensive good quality printers, satellite capabilities

  19. Key points/issues to be aware of: • Aerial photo/image is NOT A MAP! – distortions due to camera lens, aircraft movement, topography • Various levels of geometric correction and georeferencing • If desire is to use for mapping, seek ortho-rectified images – advantages to satellite based images • Ortho-rectified means corrections for all distortions – tools that warp images using a few control points are NOT ortho-rectified – requires digital elevation model and more sophisticated photogrammetry software

  20. Some providers: http://www.cnr.uidaho.edu/remotesensing/rs_courses/for375/375.htm www.asprs.org - American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing http://www.possys.com/ http://edcsns17.cr.usgs.gov/EarthExplorer/ - USGS Earth Explorer http://www.nima.mil/ - National Geospatial Intelligence Agency Many value-added image products are being developed and more are on the horizon

  21. Forest Health/Status Index Pilot Study Potlatch Corp and Forest Capital – initial end user pilot study

  22. NIR - R Normalized Difference Vegetation Index: NDVI = NIR + R

  23. Image purchasing cooperatives: Potlatch Corp., County Govt., AVISTA, Coeur d’Alene Tribe

  24. LIght Detection And Ranging (LIDAR) • 1st developed in 1960 by Hughes Aircraft inc. • Modern computers and DGPS make it practical: requires extremely accurate timing • Measures distance to surfaces by timing a laser pulse and it’s corresponding return(s) • Lidar data are the X, Y, Z positions of each return • Typically used in very accurate mapping of topography

  25. Discrete return lidar: Millions of X,Y,Z points Area of 1.0 X 0.75mi. includes ~ 440,000 returns (canopy)

  26. Lidar terrain modeling

  27. Lidar captures 3D information

  28. Talk Outline: • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)1. Definitions, tools 2. Software packages 3. Digital data sources 4. Training courses • Global Positioning Systems (GPS)(generating your own digital data) • Images – Aerial and Satellite, LIDAR (purchasing cooperatives) • Web-based Mapping and Data Management

  29. SUMMARY • Many digital data sources and tools – touched on several (GIS, GPS, Imagery, Web-based) • Should private landowners invest in these tools? Web mapping is on the horizon, subscription based – will require high speed internet connections • Value added products are becoming available (fire fuels, forest health/status index…) • Many training opportunities exist – some online • New mapping technologies on the horizon for assessing forests Lidar, value-added image products – forest health

  30. Using spatial 3-PG to predict carbon sequestration over the Priest River Experimental Forest

  31. 3-PG (Physiological Principles Predicting Growth) is forest growth process model based upon physiological processes • Empirical vs. Process models: • empirical - based on statistical relationships, predicting • outcomes (i.e. Predicting forest growth based on past growth) • process - based on processes, understanding relationships • (i.e.Predicting forest growth based on physiological processes) Process models can incorporate empirical models

  32. Structure and Causal Influences

  33. Maximum Total Biomass Allocated to Highest Value Species 100 yrs without alteration 200 yrs without alteration 100 yrs, 20% reduction ASW 100 yrs, 40% reduction ASW ABGR ABLA PIMO TSHE THPL 3-PGS Final Outputs Maximum Total Biomass 100 yrs without alteration 200 yrs without alteration 100 yrs, 20% reduction ASW 100 yrs, 40% reduction ASW Grand Fir Subalpine Fir Western White Pine Western Hemlock Western Red Cedar

More Related