846
CAN MOUNTAIN PINE BEETLE GREEN ATTACK BE DETECTED ON HIGH RESOLUTION DATA
FROM A DIGITAL AIRBORNE IMAGER?
PRELIMINARY RESULTS
I. D. Kneppeck
Dendron Resource Surveys Ltd.
880 Lady Ellen Place
Ottawa, Ontario K1Z 5L9
613-725-2971
F. J. Ahern
Canada Centre for Remote Sensing
1547 Merivale Road
Ottawa, Ontario K1 A 0Y7
613-952-2746
ABSTRACT
The Mountain Pine Beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopk.) and related bark beetles are the most serious
insect pests damaging the forests of western Canada. The preferred control strategy is to remove infested
trees before the beetles emerge and spread the infestation. Despite much effort by a number of researchers
to develop remote sensing methods to detect infested trees at the early "green attack" stage, early detection
has proven to be a very elusive goal. Successful detection has been reported using high resolution (1:2000
scale) colour infrared photography, but the high costs of surveys at these large scales make the method
impractical for operational use.
In 1986 the Canada Centre for Remote Sensing (CCRS) began a cooperative project with the British Columbia
Ministry of Forests to improve the use of remote sensing technology for mapping mountain pine beetle attack.
Foliar spectroscopic studies carried out under that project identified the spectral bands best suited for
detecting green attacked trees. In addition, a study with the airborne MEIS (Multi-element Electro-optical
Imaging Sensor) showed that high spatial resolution was necessary to detect trees at the "red attack" stage,
and implied that high resolution would also be necessary for detecting green attack.
In 1989 CCRS and the Ministry of Forests acquired data for a study of the use of MEIS data for distinguishing
green attacked lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. var. latifolia Engelm.) from unattacked lodgepole pine.
The area chosen was located approximately 35 km southeast of Cranbrook, B. C. MEIS data at 0.4 m, 1.0 m,
and 2.2 m resolution were acquired over the study area on 1989.09.01. A sample of 256 infested trees and 250
unattacked trees were identified in four principal areas on the ground and on colour infrared aerial
photography acquired simultaneously with the MEIS data. The trees used in this study were infested during
the summer of 1989 and their foliage was still green with no visual sign of weakening or discolouration at the
time of the ground sampling, 1989.10.02 through 1989.10.05.
Spectral features were analyzed using visual enhancement techniques and digital measures of the separability
between the attacked and unattacked classes. The results showed larger differences occurring between sites
than between the attacked and unattacked trees.
KEYWORDS: MEIS, colour infrared photography, mountain pine beetle, green attack, digital image analysis
1. INTRODUCTION
The mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae
Hopk.) is the most destructive pest of lodgepole
pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. var. latifolia Engelm.) in
British Columbia. In fact, the annual allowable cut
was increased approximately 59 percent for the
Cranbrook, British Columbia timber supply area for
a period of three years starting in 1989 in order to
combat the mountain pine beetle problem (Ministry
of Forests News Release, 1989).
The life cycle of the mountain pine beetle and
methods used to reduce losses have been described
elsewhere (Safranyik et at, 1974). By the time the
tree visually appears attacked and needles have
turned red, one year following initial attack, beetles
have often already left the tree and spread to
adjacent trees. Shortening the detection time of
trees infested with beetles, such that trees can be
removed before beetles emerge to infect other trees
could, in principle, slow the spread of an attack and
help keep down the beetle population. Methods
currently used to detect trees in the green attack
stage, when the needles are green and beetles are
still in the tree, include ground inspections.
Symptoms of this phase of infestation are reddish-
brown boring dust found at the base of freshly
attacked trees, and the presence of pitch tubes
which usually form around entrance holes on the
bark in the summer of attack.
Investigations into the early detection cf beetle
attack involving the use of colour infrared aerial
photographs have been successful. Hobbs and
Murtha (1983) were able to correctly classify new