“…Furthermore, not only the spatial constellation of neighboring trees but also the temporal dynamics of individual tree crown structure and canopy space filling are important aspects in forest research. However, such studies with multitemporal point cloud data analyses are rare, mainly focusing on standard tree dendrometrics or wood volume estimations (Liang et al., 2012; Srinivasan et al., 2014). Our new method is, thus, a very promising approach which should lead to important advances in several aspects of forest ecological research, such as investigations on crown growth, morphology and plasticity (Longuetaud, Piboule, Wernsdörfer, & Collet, 2013; Schröter, Härdtle, & von Oheimb, 2012), canopy structures and canopy packing (Jucker, Bouriaud, Coomes, & Baltzer, 2015; Morin, 2015; Pretzsch, 2014), crown‐related tree interactions and competition (Fichtner, Sturm, Rickert, von Oheimb, & Härdtle, 2013; Lang et al., 2012; Potvin & Dutilleul, 2009; Thorpe, Astrup, Trowbridge, & Coates, 2010), and niche differentiation and spatial complementarity (Ishii & Asano, 2010; Sapijanskas, Paquette, Potvin, Kunert, & Loreau, 2014; Williams, Paquette, Cavender‐Bares, Messier, & Reich, 2017), including changes over time.…”