The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Voi. XXXVII. Part Bl. Beijing 2008
ground surface; b) middle - medium rough ground surface; c)
bottom - rough ground surface (see text).
Dataset
Ground Roughness
Appr. Two
Appr.
Three
20m
Pine
Smooth
Median rough
Rough
19.7±2.2m
17.8±1.9m
9.9±2.3m
19.4+2.4m
18.8±2.0m
10.0±2.0m
10m
Deciduous
Smooth
Median rough
Rough
9.6+0.9m
9.0+0.9m
5.6+1.2m
9.6+0.8m
9.1±1.0m
5.9+0.8m
Table 2. Estimated tree height from PolSARproSim simulated
datasets
3.2 Results from INDREX-II Data
In November 2004, DLR conducted an ESA-sponsored airborne
radar campaign over Indonesian tropical forest, called
INDREX-II (Hjansek, et. al., 2005a). Data from that campaign
has subsequently been made available by ESA. We selected one
of the test sites called Mawas-E as our study area because of its
flat topography and the availability of measured tree height
samples. The area is a tropical peat swamp forest located in
Kalimantan, Indonesia. The L-/P-Band InSAR data were
acquired by DLR’s E-SAR system in a quad-pol, repeat-pass
mode along with single-pass X-Band data.
Figure 4 shows a subset of the X-Band amplitude image
acquired in the same campaign over the Mawas-E test site. The
area is flat and there is a clear transition from bare area to forest
area moving from west to east (from left to right in Figure 4).
The left part of the image is a bare or low vegetated area, where
we can expect the X-Band DSM (Digital Surface Model) is
close to the ground thus we can use this area to normalize or
validate the DEMs derived from L- or P-Band data.
Figure 4 Selected ROI on X-Band image: The two red short
lines on the right hand side of the image are two tree transects.
The tree height measurements were carried out concurrently
with the data acquisition campaign (see Figure 4, the two red
short lines in the right hand side of the image). According to the
ground measurement, there are more than half of the measured
trees that are short, thin and branchless, which form a very
dense understory with a height ranging from 2m to 8m and a
spacing around lm. Trees with branches are about 17m high on
average. Figure 5 also shows two of the ground photos taken in
the forest near the tree transect. The photos show that the taller
trees have branches and large canopy crowns while the
understory consists of branchless, thin, and relatively shorter
trees.
To quantify the average forest height, the two tree measurement
sites, each 100 meters long by 10 meters wide, are divided into
non-overlapping lOmxlOm subplots, resulting in 10 subplots for
north site and 10 for south site. The highest measured tree
height in each subplot is defined as h 100 (Mette, et. al., 2004). In
addition, as a second check in the case of h /0 o not being
representative of the canopy, the second highest measured tree
height in each subplots is also determined and called hj 0 o■ The
forest in the test site can be described as “undisturbed peat swap
forest” and is relatively dense, high, and uniform (Hajnsek and
Hoekman, 2006). Therefore, the canopy height seen by a radar
system over each subplot can be represented by either h t0 o or
hjoo- Figure 6 gives h m and hj 00 as measured from tree
transects. The average h m value is about 23m, while the
average hj 0 o value is about 20m. The latter values show a
smaller spread in heights.
Figure 5 Ground photos of the forest
Subplots (10mX10m)
Figure 6 h/oo height (a) and hj 0 o height (b) as measured from
tree transects (see text).
The phase optimization and three tree height estimation
approaches were applied to L-Band 10m baseline dataset.
Figure 7 shows the outputs from the three approaches. The
statistics of the estimated tree height around the tree transect
area is given in Table 3.