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Auxiliary information resolution effects on small area estimation in plantation forest inventory

Formally Refereed

Abstract

In forest inventory, traditional ground-based resource assessments are often expensive and time-consuming forcing managers to reduce sample sizes to meet budgetary and logistical constraints. Small area estimation (SAE) is a class of statistical estimators that uses a combination of traditional survey data and linearly related auxiliary information to improve estimate precision. These techniques have been shown to improve the precision of stand-level inventory estimates in loblolly pine plantations using lidar height percentiles and thinning status as covariates. In this study, the effects of reduced lidar point-cloud densities and lower digital elevation model (DEM) spatial resolutions were investigated for total planted volume estimates using area-level SAE models. In the managed Piedmont pine plantation conditions evaluated, lower lidar point-cloud densities and DEM spatial resolutions were found to have minimal effects on estimates and precision. The results of this study are promising to those interested in incorporating SAE methods into forest inventory programs

Citation

Green, P Corey; Burkhart, Harold E; Coulston, John W; Radtke, Philip J; Thomas, Valerie A. 2020. Auxiliary information resolution effects on small area estimation in plantation forest inventory. Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research. 93(5): 685-693. https://doi.org/10.1093/forestry/cpaa012.
Citations
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/61530