Monitoring the structure parameters and damage to trees plays an important role in forest management. Remote-sensing data collected by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) provides valuable resources to improve the efficiency of decision making. In this work, we propose an approach to enhance algorithms for species classification and assessment of the vital status of forest stands by using automated individual tree crowns delineation (ITCD). The approach can be potentially used for inventory and identifying the health status of trees in regional-scale forest areas. The proposed ITCD algorithm goes through three stages: preprocessing (contrast enhancement), crown segmentation based on wavelet transformation and morphological operations, and boundaries detection. The performance of the ITCD algorithm was demonstrated for different test plots containing homogeneous and complex structured forest stands. For typical scenes, the crown contouring accuracy is about 95%. The pixel-by-pixel classification is based on the ensemble supervised classification method error correcting output codes with the Gaussian kernel support vector machine chosen as a binary learner. We demonstrated that pixel-by-pixel species classification of multi-spectral images can be performed with a total error of about 1%, which is significantly less than by processing RGB images. The advantage of the proposed approach lies in the combined processing of multispectral and RGB photo images.
Integrated assessment of urban green infrastructure condition in Karlovo urban area by in-situ observations and remote sensing. One Ecosystem 3: e21610.
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