“…Remotely sensed data provide benefits over field‐based methods with respect to data collection efficiency, spatial extent, and spatial resolution (Breda, 2003; Chen, McDermid, Castilla, & Linke, 2017). Airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data are widely used in forestry for determining vegetation height (Li et al, 2016; Sullivan, Ducey, Orwig, Cook, & Palace, 2017), LAI (Richardson, Moskal, & Kim, 2009; Solberg, Næsset, Hanssen, & Christiansen, 2006; Tseng, Lin, & Wang, 2016), phenology, and classification (Tomsett & Leyland, 2019). Some studies have utilized LiDAR to characterize vegetation and implement resistance equations to calculate vegetation‐induced roughness (Abu‐Aly et al, 2014; Antonarakis et al, 2010; Antonarakis, Richards, Brasington, Bithell, & Muller, 2008; Casas, Lane, Yu, & Benito, 2010; Mason, Cobby, Horritt, & Bates, 2003; Prior, Aquilina, Czuba, Pingel, & Hession, 2021; Straatsma & Baptist, 2008; Wang & Zhang, 2019).…”