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Spatial prediction of basal area and volume in Eucalyptus stands using Landsat TM data: an assessment of prediction methods
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Abstract
Background: In fast-growing forests such as Eucalyptus plantations, the correct determination of stand productivity is
essential to aid decision making processes and ensure the efficiency of the wood supply chain. In the past decade,
advances in remote sensing and computational methods have yielded new tools, techniques, and technologies that
have led to improvements in forest management and forest productivity assessments. Our aim was to estimate and
map the basal area and volume of Eucalyptus stands through the integration of forest inventory, remote sensing,
parametric, and nonparametric methods of spatial prediction.
Methods: This study was conducted in 20 5-year-old clonal stands (362 ha) of Eucalyptus urophylla S.T.Blake x Eucalyptus
camaldulensis Dehnh. The stands are located in the northwest region of Minas Gerais state, Brazil. Basal area and volume
data were obtained from forest inventory operations carried out in the field. Spectral data were collected from a Landsat
5 TM satellite image, composed of spectral bands and vegetation indices. Multiple linear regression (MLR), random forest
(RF), support vector machine (SVM), and artificial neural network (ANN) methods were used for basal area and volume
estimation. Using ordinary kriging, we spatialised the residuals generated by the spatial prediction methods for the
correction of trends in the estimates and more detailing of the spatial behaviour of basal area and volume.
Results: The ND54 index was the spectral variable that had the best correlation values with basal area (r = − 0.91) and
volume (r = − 0.52) and was also the variable that most contributed to basal area and volume estimates by the MLR and
RF methods. The RF algorithm presented smaller basal area and volume errors when compared to other machine
learning algorithms and MLR. The addition of residual kriging in spatial prediction methods did not necessarily result in
relative improvements in the estimations of these methods.
Conclusions: Random forest was the best method of spatial prediction and mapping of basal area and volume in the
study area. The combination of spatial prediction methods with residual kriging did not result in relative improvement of
spatial prediction accuracy of basal area and volume in all methods assessed in this study, and there is not always a
spatial dependency structure in the residuals of a spatial prediction method. The approaches used in this study provide a
framework for integrating field and multispectral data, highlighting methods that greatly improve spatial prediction of
basal area and volume estimation in Eucalyptus stands. This has potential to support fast growth plantation monitoring,
offering options for a robust analysis of high-dimensional data
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Forest inventory, Machine learning algorithms, Multiple linear regression, Random forest, Support vector machine, Artificial neural networks, Inventário florestal, Algoritmos de aprendizado de máquina, Regressão linear múltipla, Floresta aleatória, Máquina de vetor de suporte, Redes neurais artificiais
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REIS, A. A. dos et al. Spatial prediction of basal area and volume in Eucalyptus stands using Landsat TM data: an assessment of prediction methods. New Zealand Journal of Forestry Science, Rotorua, v. 48, n. 1, p. 1-17, Dec. 2018.
