Full text: Resource and environmental monitoring

  
  
       
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Figure 5: Good regular crown spacing, typical for 
the majority of commercially managed olive tree 
alue stands (example from Portugal) 
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The right of the olive tree parcel is obscuring several 
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etc. Figure 9: Mature, tall plantation (bottom right, +/- 
1.8 4m) with extended shadows, and regular smaller 
51S) trees (2m high) without shadow. The bright zone 
tem far right contains olive trees pruned and managed 
tion in rows - not resolvable on image (France). 
  
  
Figure 6: Typical register parcel (black outline) 
with regular spaced (but incomplete) stand. Note 
variations in background grey levels (Portugal) 
   
    
  
Figure 8: Regular olive tree stand (right of image) 
extended shadowing. The Forest stand to the adjacent to fruit trees, in a mixed zone. Most 
parcel boundaries are non-olive trees, but at mid 
left of image, a horizontal row of five olive trees 
can be identified (France). 
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Figure 10: Complex, irregular zone, with 
possibility of confusion between species. Crown 
densities in this image are also saturated, 
displaying limited dynamic range, complicating 
species identification (Greece). 
Intemational Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Part 7, Budapest, 1998 361 
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